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CQPmiCUT DEPOSIT. 



THE CATECHISM EXPLAINED 



AN EXHA U8TIVE EXPOSITION OF 
THE 0HRI8TIAN RELIGION, 

WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE PRESENT STATE OF 
SOCIETY AND THE SPIRIT OF THE AGE. 



A PRACTICAL MANUAL 

FOR THE USE OF THE PREACHER, THE CATECHI8T, 
THE TEACHER, AND THE FAMILY. 



MADE ATTRACTIVE AND INTERESTING BY 

ILLUSTRATIONS, COMPARISONS, AND QUOTATIONS 

FROM THE 

SCRIPTURES, THE FATHERS, AND OTHER WRITERa 

FROM THE ORIGINAI/ OF 

Eev. FEANCIS SPIEAGO, 

Professor of Theology. 
EDITED BY 

Rev. RICHARD F. CLARKE, S.J. 

WITH ALPHABETICAL INDEX. 




New York, Cincinnati, Chicago: 
EN^ZIOER BROTHERS, 

PRIKTERS TO THE | PVSLISHERS OV 

HOLY APOITOLIC lU | BBNZIGER'S MAOAZINS 






^tt)tl <^tifiitat 



Arthur J. Soanlan, S.T.D., 

Censor Librorum, 



Impmmtm. 



^> PATRICK J. HAYES, D.D., 

Archbishop of New York. 



New York, October 18, 1921. 



Copyright, 1899, 1921, by BE^fzIGER Brothers 



MAR -5 "24 

C1A777428 



PKEFAOE. 



This Catechism is suited to the needs of the day, and may 
either be p aced in the hands of the people, or enijojed aTa 
manua.1 for the use «f Priests and Catechists. The small prin is 
the part adapted i^.r popular reading or for catechetical Ltru ! 
tion. The au hor tbnks it necessary to giye the following explan- 
ation of the plan of the book. ^ ^ 

1. This Catechism is divided into three parts : The first rnrt 
rea s of f^tl, the second of nu>raU, the third'of tU meaJofg^^. 
In the first part Onr Lord appears in His character of Teacher • in 
he second in His character of King; and in the third in ffis 
character of High Priest. And since this Catechism proposes as 
Its pnmary object to answer the question, for ^hat purpose are we 
here upon earth, thereby emphasizing and giving Jrolinen ! To 
nian s high calling and destiny, it is especially suitfd to the pr^ enj 
day, when the pursuit of material interests, self-indu gencrand 

fnr;LT°"" *'^ r"*'°" '' ^ --y- This CafechLfs 
m fact nothing more nor less than an abstract of Our Lord's teach 
ing, and may be called a guide book for the Christian on the Tad 
to heaven. First the goal of the traveller is indicated, and hen'he 

are told what is to be done by the use of the understanding • we 

r ;;! tt *° '""tt'^ °* ^°^ "^ beiievmg ttU 

th a d of the w n ^:^r ''' '°^^ ^^'' '' '' ''« -J^e by 

keeninVtblt T T' '"'""" °"' ^'" '' '^' ^^^ "f God by 

keeping the commandments ; in the third part we are told what we 

must do in oi^er to enlighten our understanding and strenlln 

ir w, 1, which have been respectively obscured fnd weakenfd W 

igina Ism : we must obtain the grace of the Holy Spirit through 

^se of the appointed means of gr.ce, for by the gice'of the Ho^J 



6 Preface. 

Spirit the undeo'staiidiiig is enlightened and the will strengthened. 
Thus a close connection exists between the different parts of this 
Catechism. Each part is subdivided and arranged to form a 
whole, so that the connection between and the coherence of all 
the truths of religion are plainly apparent. This is a very impor- 
tant point. For the more clearly we perceive the manner in which 
the truths of religion are linked together, the easier will it be for 
us to apprehend each one singly. The Catechism is a marvellously 
connected system of revealed truth. If Catholics were thoroughly 
acquainted in their childhood with the fundamental truths of 
religion ; if they were taught to see how all the different parts of 
this divine edifice combine to form one beauteous structure, the 
darts of hell would have no power to injure them. 

2. The large print in this Catechism is the scaffolding, or skel- 
eton ; it contains all the essential truths of religion. The small 
print might, as a matter of fact, be omitted; but in that case there 
would be nothing calculated to touch the heart and kindle the 
flame of charity towards God and one's neighbor, and is not this 
the effect which every good hand-book of religion, every good ser- 
mon, every good catechetical instruction ought to produce ? We 
already possess in abundance catechisms and religious manuals 
which appeal only to the intellect ; books which do not aim at the 
warmth of expression and the fervent, persuasive eloquence which 
appeal to the heart, the force and vivifying power which affect the 
will through the influence of the Holy Spirit. 

3. This Catechism aims at cultivating, to an equal extent, all 
the three powers of the soul : the understanding, the affections, 
and the will. It does not therefore content itself with mere defini- 
tions. The principal object proposed in it is not to teach men to 
philosophize about religion, but to make them good Christians 
who will delight in their faith. Consequently questions of 
scholastic theology, doctrines debated among divines, are either 
omitted altogether or merely receive a passing mention. The 
author has endeavored to divest religious teaching of the appear- 
ance of learning, and to present it in a popular and simple form. 
Technical terms, in which almost all religious manuals abound, 
even those intended for children, are carefully eliminated from his 
pages since, while useful and necessary for seminarians and theo- 
logians, they are out of place in a book intended for the laity. 
Popular manuals of religion ought to be couched in plain and 



Preface. 7 

simple language, like that used by Our Lord and the apostles, easy 
of comprehension ; for what we need is something that will touch 
the heart and influence the will, not cram the mind with knowl- 
edge unattractive to the reader. The present book is, moreover, 
not an adaptation of catechisms already in use, but an original 
work, intended for practical purposes. Attention may also be 
called to the fact that the teaching of the Church is not presented 
in a dry, abstract form, but is rendered attractive and interesting 
by illustrations, comparisons, and quotations from well-known 
writers. Thus there is no danger that it will be thrown aside as 
unreadable. The extracts from the writings of the Fathers axe 
not always given verbatim, the idea alone being in many cases bor- 
rowed, as a literal rendering of the language employed, beautiful 
and forcible as it is, might prove rather misleading than edifying to 
the young and unlearned. The same may be said of some passages 
taken from Holy Scripture. What is of paramount importance in 
a book of this nature is to make use of expressions that are clear 
and intelligible. The writings of the Fathers are quoted mainly 
to elucidate and illustrate, not to prove the truths that are enun- 
ciated. 

4. In preparing this Catechism for publication, the author has 
tept in view his purpose of assisting the teacher. To this end he 
has made it his endeavor to arrange his matter according to a clear 
ttnd methodical system ; to place his ideas in logical sequence, and 
io clothe them in simple language composed of short sentences. 
All the several branches of religious teaching — the Catechism, 
Bible history, the liturgy, controversy, ecclesiastical history — have 
been comprehended in one course of instruction, which has un- 
questionably the effect of enhancing the interest and appealing to 
the understanding as well as to the heart and the will. The old- 
fashioned form of embodying the instruction to be given in ques- 
tion and answer has not been followed. That form is not sufficient, 
and needs further elaboration. Faith comes by hearing, not by 
questioning only. A knowledge of all the truths of our holy 
religion is not so universal that they can be thoroughly 
learned by question and answer : they must be regularly taught 
by oral instruction. This form of teaching calls for the exer- 
cise of more thought ; question and answer, moreover, do noth- 
ing towards simplifying the truths to be imparted, or rendering 
them more intelligible to the learner. 



6 Preface. 

5. The state of society and the spirit of the age have also been 
taken into consideration in the preparation of this book. The 
writer has endeavored in the first place to combat the self-seeking, 
pleasure-loving materialism of the day. This appears in the open- 
ing part and also in the fact that the moral law is enlarged upon at 
great length. It was not deemed sufficient merely to enumerate 
the several virtues and vices — ^virtue is depicted in all its beauty 
and excellence, vice in all its hideousness and malice — at the same 
time the remedies for the different vices are added. Furthermore, 
precepts of great importance, suited to the exigencies of the time, 
far from being passed over, are elaborately explained. Under the 
heading of the Third Commandment the obligation of work and 
the Christian view of labor are treated, in accordance with the 
directions of the Council of Trent. Under the Fourth Command- 
ment our duty towards the Pope and the ruler of our country, the 
duty of Catholics in regard to elections is expounded. Under the 
Fifth Commandment the nature of human life and the sinfulness 
of injuring one's health for the sake of vanity or pleasure are 
shown. Under the Tenth Commandment, a plain statement is 
made of Socialistic and democratic principles ; and after this, the 
proper use to be made of money and the duty of almsgiving are 
set forth. Prominence is given to the works of mercy, which Our 
Lord declares to be essential to salvation, and which are an ampli- 
fication of the Decalogue; while under the occasions of sin, the evils 
of the day, the exaggerated craving for excitement and pleasure, 
love of dress, the desire to be fashionable, besides society papers, 
objectionable plays, etc., are duly censured. Charity to God and 
one's neighbor, a virtue too rare in the present day, is treated at 
some length, and a considerable space is also devoted to the consid- 
eration of the Christian's attitude in regard to affliction and pov- 
erty, the duty of gratitude, the deceitful nature of earthly posses- 
sions and earthly enjoyments, and the necessity of self-conquest. 
Also in matters such as civil marriage, cremation. Catholic con' 
gresses. Passion plays, etc., it cannot be alleged that this Catechism 
is not fully up to date. 

6. In its present form this Catechism is intended primarily for 
the use of Priests and Catechists ; it will save them much time in 
preparing their instructions, as they will find examples, compari- 
sons, and explanations ready to hand. By abridging the small 
print it will also serve as a school-catechism. When instructing 



Preface. 9 

Deginners the Catechist must confine himself to the large print : 
it will be sufficient for children of moderate abilities to know and 
understand that thoroughly. It is, and ever will be, the basis upon 
which the whole structure of religious knowledge, raised by oral 
instruction, will rest. In after years what is wanted will not be 
iSO much an increase of theological knowledge, as a lucid explana- 
tion of the truths already learned, and further proofs are added for 
the sake of deepening religious conviction. 

The small print may be considerably abridged for use in schools, 
but it must not be left out altogether, as it will serve to recall to the 
minds of the children the truths they have been taught. It con- 
tains also many useful suggestions for the Catechist on subjects of 
importance which must hold a place in his instructions. Moreover, 
parents who go through the Catechism with their children at home 
will be compelled to read the small print, and thus, with no effort 
on their part, tiiey will obtain a more intimate knowledge of 
Christian doctrine. 

It is most important in these days of unbelief that the school 
should be the means of reviving a Christian spirit in the family. 
Hence it is advisable that the Catechist should take the chief 
points and the plan of his instruction from a book, and it should 
not be left to each individual to propound what truths he pleases. 
Besides, it is desirable that the catechumens themselves should have 
the essential part of the instruction placed before them in black 
and white ; for it is a known fact that what is not seen by the eye 
is not long retained by the memory. If the impression received, 
the feelings excited, the resolutions called forth are to be perma- 
nent, they must be re-awakened by reading the Catechism. Thus the 
Catechism becomes not merely a class-book, but a book of spiritual 
reading, to be taken up again and re-read in after years. Hence 
we see what a wide sphere of usefulness the books used in our 
schools may have. Ought a book whose influence is so extensive, 
which contains the most important of all teaching, present that 
teaching in a dry, uninteresting form, or give a scanty outline, 
the mere framework of the truths of religion ? 

In publishing an English translation of this manual of Chris- 
tian truth, it is hoped that it may find as hearty a welcome among 
English-speaking nations as the original did in the author's own 
country. He ventures to hope that it may greatly promote the 
glory of Grod and the salvation of souls. In order to secure the 



10 Preface, 

blessing of God upon his labors, lie dedicated the work to the 
Immaculate Mother of God ; and it cannot be doubted that the 
blessings of the Most High rests upon it, for although at the out- 
set it encountered formidable obstacles, it has since had an unex- 
pectedly widespread and rapid circulation. 



CONTENTS. 



PAOS 

Preface 5 

Devotions 59 

I. Prayers and Precepts of the Church 59 

1. The Sign of the Cross 59 

2. The Lord's Prayer 59 

3. The Angelical Salutation 59 

4. The Apostles' Creed 59 

6. The Two Precepts of Charity. 60 

6. The Ten Commandments of God 60 

7. The Six Precepts of the Church 60 

n. Prayers which may be used Daily at Different Times 61 

1. A Morning Prayer 61 

2. A Night Prayer 61 

3. An Act of Good Intention 61 

4. Grace before Meals 61 

5. Grace after Meals 61 

6. Prayer for One's Parents 62 

III. Prayers to be said at Different Times when the Church Bell 

is Heard 62 

1. The Angelus 62 

2. Prayer in Commemoration of Our Lord's Passion, to be said 

at Three O'clock on Fridays 62 

3. Prayer for the Souls in Purgatory, to be said when the 

Church Bell is Tolled 63 

4. Prayers to be said when the Bell is rung at Mass 63 

5. Prayer at the Off irtory 63 

6. At the Consecration 63 

7. At the Communion 64 

IV. Devotions for Confession and Communion 64 

1. The Form for Confession 64 

2. Acts of the Three Theological Virtues 64 

3. An Act of Contrition 65 

4. Renewal of Baptismal Vows 65 

V. Devotions to the Holy Ghost 66 

1. Prayer to^the Holy Ghost 66 

2. Hymn to the Holy Ghost 66 

11 



12 Contents. 



VI. Special Prayers 67 

1. The Salve Regina 67 

2. The Memorare 67 

3. The Holy Rosary 67 

4. Prayer to St. Joseph 68 

5. Prayer to Our Guardian Angel 68 

Genebal Survey 69 



1Introt)uctiom 



I. FOR WHAT END ARE WE ON THIS EARTH ? 

We are upon this earth in order that we may glorify God, and so 
win for ourselves eternal happiness 73 



II. HOW ARE WE TO ATTAIN TO ETERNAL HAPPINESS ? 

We shall attain to eternal happiness by the following means: 

1. We must strive to know God by means of faith in the truths He 

has revealed to us 74 

2. We must fulfil the will of God by keeping His commandments. ... 74 

3. We must, therefore, avail ourselves of the means of grace; of 

which the chief are holy Mass, the sacraments and prayers 75 



III. CAN WE ATTAIN PERFECT HAPPINESS ON EARTH? 

1. Earthly goods, such as riches, honor, pleasure, cannot by them- 

selves make us happy; for they cannot satisfy our soul; they 
often only make life bitter, and invariably forsake us in death . . 75 

2. Only the Gospel of Christ is capable of giving us a partial happi- 

ness on earth, for he who follows the teaching of Christ is certain 

to have peace in his soul 76 

3. He who follows Christ will have to endure persecution; but these 

persecutions can do him no harm 76 

4. Hence perfect happiness is impossible on earth; for no man can 

entirely avoid suffering 77 



PAET I. 

faitb. 

I. THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD. 

1. The happiness of the angels and saints consists in the knowledge 

of God 79 



Contents. 



2. The knowledge of God is all important, for without it there cannot 

be any happiness on earth, or a well-ordered life 79 

3. We arrive at a right knowledge of God through faith in the truths 

which God has revealed 80 



II. DIVINE REVELATION. 

God has in His mercy in the course of ages often revealed Himself to 

men (Heb. i. 1, 2) 80 



III. THE PREACHING OF THE GOSPEL. 

1. The truths revealed by God to men were by God's command pro- 

claimed to all nations of the earth by the Catholic Church, and 
especially by means of the living word — that is, by preaching 83 

2. The Catholic Church derives from Holy Scripture and from Tra- 

dition the truths that God has revealed 84 



IV. HOLY SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION. 

1. Holy Scripture or the Bible consists of seventy- two books, which 

were written by men inspired by God, and under the guidance 
and influence of the Holy Ghost. These seventy-two books are 
recognized by the Church as " The Word of God." 84 

2. The truths of divine revelation, which have not been written down 

in the pages of Holy Scripture, but have been transmitted by 
word of mouth, are called Tradition 88 



V. THE CHRISTIAN FAITH. 

i. Christian faith is the firm conviction arrived at with the grace of 
God, that all that Jesus Christ taught on earth is true, as well 
as all that the Catholic Church teaches by the commission she has 
received from Him 89 

2. Faith is concerned with many things which we cannot perceive 

with our senses and cannot grasp with our understanding 89 

3. We act quite in accordance with reason when we believe, because 

we trust ourselves to God's truthfulness, and because we know 

for certain that the truths of faith are revealed to us by God. ... 90 

4. The Christian faith comprises all the doctrines of the Catholic 

faith 91 

5. Faith is a gift of God, since the power to believe can only be at- 

tained through the grace of God 92 

6. Faith is necessary to eternal salvation 93 

7. Faith alone is not sufficient for salvation 94 



VI. THE MOTIVES OF FAITH. 

1. The external motives which move us to believe are chiefly miracles 

and prophecy 9d 



14 Contents, 



PAOS 



2. Miracles are such extraordinary works as cannot be performed 

by the mere powers of nature, but are brought about by the in- 
tervention of a higher power 95 

3. Miracles are wrought by almighty God only for His own glory, 

and especially for the confirmation of true doctrine 96 

4. In working miracles God usually makes use of the intervention 

of man, sometimes even of wicked men 96 

5. Prophecies are clear and definite predictions of future events that 

can be known to God alone 97 

6. God for the most part entrusts the prophesying of future events to 

His messengers, for the confirmation of the true faith or for the 
benefit of men 97 



VII. ON THE ABSENCE AND LOSS OF FAITH. 

1. Those who do not possess Christian faith are either: (1), Heretics, 

or (2), Infidels 98 

2. Faith is for the most part lost either: (1), by indifference to the 

doctrines of faith; (2), by wilful doubt respecting the truths of 
faith; (3), by reading books or other literature that is hostile to 
the faith; (4), by frequenting the assemblies of those who are 
hostile to the faith; (5), by neglecting the practice of one's re- 
ligion 100 

3. All men who through their own fault die without Christian 

faith are by the just judgment of God sentenced to eternal per- 
dition 101 



VIII. ON THE DUTY OP CONFESSING OUR FAITH. 

1. God requires of us that we should make outward profession of our 

faith 102 

2. Our Lord has promised eternal life to him who fearlessly makes 

profession of his faith 103 



IX. THE SIGN OF THE CROSS. 

1. In making the sign of the cross we make profession of the most 

important of all the mysteries of our holy religion ; viz., the doc- 
trine of the Blessed Trinity and of the Incarnation of Our Lord 
Jesus Christ 105 

2. By means of the sign of the cross we obtain a blessing from God; 

and especially by it are we protected from the assaults of the 
devil and from all dangers both to body and to soul 106 



X. THE APOSTLES* CREED. 

1. The Apostles* Creed contains in brief all that a Catholic must know 

and believe 108 

2. The Apostles' Creed may be divided into three several parts 108 

3. The Apostles' Creed may also be divided into twelve articles 109 



Contents, t& 



FIRST ARTICLE OF THE CREED: "I BELIEVE IN GOD, THE 
FATHER ALMIGHTY." 

1. The Existence of a Supreme Being. 

PAO» 

1. We can infer from the created world around us that there exists 

a supreme Being 109 

2. The existence of God is also proved from revelation Ill 



2. The Divine Essence. 

1. God is a self-existent Being, infinite m His perfections, glory, and 

beatitude, the Creator and Ruler of the whole world 112 

2. We cannot see God^ because He is a spirit, i.e., a being without 

body, immortal, possessed of intellect and free will 113 

3. There is one God, and one only 114 



3. The Divine Attributes. 

1. God is eternal, i.e., always was, is, and ever will be 114 

2. God is omnipresent, i.e., He is in every place 115 

3. God is immutable, i.e., He ever remains the same 117 

4. God h omniscient, i.e., He knows all things, the past, the present, 

and the future, and also our inmost thoughts (Jer. xvii. 10) .... 117 

5. God is supremely wise, i.e.. He knows how to direct everything 

for the best, in order to carry out His designs 119 

6. God is almighty, i.e., God can do all that He wills, and that by a 
mere act of His will 120 

7. God is supremely good, i.e.. He loves His creatures far more than 

a father loves his children 121 

8. God is very patient, i.e., He leaves the sinner time for repent- 
ance and a change of life 123 

9. God is full of mercy and compassion, i.e., He very readily forgives 

our sins when we are sincerdy sorry for them 124 

10. God is infinitely holy, i.e.. He loves good and hates all evil 125 

11. God is infinitely just, i.e.. He rewards all good and punishes all 

evil deeds 125 

12. God is a God of perfect truth, i.e., all that He reveals to man is 

true 127 

13. God is faithful, i.e., He keeps His promises and carries out His 
threats 127 



4. The Blessed Trinity. 

1. The Blessed Trinity is one God in three persons 128 

2. We cannot with our feeble understanding grasp the doctrine of 

the Blessed Trinity, and it is therefore called a mystery 128 

3. The nature, the attributes, and the works of the three persons of 

the Blessed Trinity are common to all of them 129 

4. The three divine persons are divided only in their origin 180 



16 Contents, 

PAGE 

5. We are taught the mystery of the Blessed Trinity by Christ Him- 

self, but it was partly known in the time of the Old Testament. . 131 

6. The belief in the Blessed Trinity is expressed in the Apostles' Creed, 

in Baptism, and in the other sacraments, in all consecrations and 
blessings, and in the feast of the Most Holy Trinity 131 

6. History of Creation. 

1. In the beginning God created the spiritual and material universe. . 132 

2. The material world was at the first without form, without inhab- 

itants, and without light 132 

3. God gave to the material universe its present form in the course 

of six days 133 

4. On the seventh day God rested from all His work that He had 

done 134 

FROM WHAT, AND FOR WHAT END, HAS GOD CREATED THE WORLD? 

1. God made the world out of nothing, simply because it pleased Him 

to make it 135 

2. God was moved to make the world by His great goodness. 136 

3. The end of creation is necessarily to proclaim to men the glory o 

God 136 

6. Divine Providence. 

We call by the name of divine providence, God's preservation and 
government of the world 137 

1. God maintains the world, i.e., He preserves all creatures in exist- 

ence as long as He wills 137 

2. God governs the world, i.e., He conducts all things in the world, 

so that they contribute to His glory and to our advantage 137 

3. For this reason a pious Christian should resign himself entirely 

to the will of God 138 

HOW ARE THE MISFORTUNES OF THE GOOD AND THE PROSPERITY OF 
THE WICKED TO BE RECONCILED WITH THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD? 

No sinner has true happiness, and his good fortune is only transitory. . 139 

HOW IS SIN TO BE RECONCILED WITH THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD? 

God is not responsible for sin 140 

7. The Christian under Suffering. 

1. No one can attain to eternal salvation without suffering 141 

2. All suffering comes from God, and is a sign of His love and favor. . 141 

3. God sends suffering to the sinner to bring him back into the 

right way, and to save him from eternal death 142 

4. God sends suffering to the just man to try him, whether he loves 

God most or creatures 143 

5. Sufferings then are no real evil, but are benefits from the hand of 

God 144 

6. For this reason we should be patient under suffering, and should 

reiign ourselves to the will of God 144 



Contents, 17 



8. The Angels. 

PAOB 

1. The angeis are pure spirits 146 

2. All the angels whom God created were at the beginning in the 

grace of God and well pleasing to Him. But many of the angels 
sinned through pride, and were cast down by God into hell for- 
ever (2 Pet. ii. 4) 147 

3. The evil angels are our enemies; they envy us, seek to lead us to 

sin, and can, with God's permission, injure us in our bodies or in 

our worldly goods 147 

4. The angels who remained faithful to God behold the face of God 

continually and sing His praises 150 

6. The holy angels are also called guardian angels, because they watch 

over us (Heb. i. 14) 150 



9. Man. 
The Creation of Man. 

1. God made the body of man out of the dust of the earth, and 

breathed into him a living soul 152 

2. The first human beings that God created were Adam and Eve 153 

10. The Soul of Man. 

1. The soul of man is made in the image of God, since it is a spirit 

like to God 154 

2. The soul of man is immortal, i.e., it can never cease to exist 154 



11. The Supernatural Endowments of Man. 

1. Our first parents were created in the grace of God, and therefore 

possessed singular perfections of soul and body 156 

2. These special perfections of our first parents we call supernatural 

gifts, because they are something altogether beyond, and were 
added, to human nature 157 



12. Original Sin. 

1. God imposed on man in paradise a precept; He forbade him to eat 

the fruit of one of the trees, which stood in the midst of the 
Garden of Eden 158 

2. Man allowed himself to be led astray by the devil, and trans- 

gressed the precept of his Creator 168 

3. The transgression of the precept of God had disastrous conse- 

quences; man lost sanctifying grace and all his supernatural 
gifts, and also suffered injuries both in soul and body 159 

4. The sin of our first parents with all its evil consequences has 

passed on to their descendants 161 



IB * Contents. 



SECOND TO SEVENTH ARTICLE OP THE CREED: 
JESUS CHRIST, 

1. The Redemption. 

PAOK 

Our Lord Jesus Christ, Our Redeemer, has freed us from the evil con- 
sequences of sin 163 



2. The Promise of the Redeemer. 

1. Immediately after the Fall God promised man a Redeemer 163 

2. Two thousand years later God promised to Abraham that the 

Redeemer should be one of his descendants 164 

3. At a later time God sent the prophets, and through their mouth 

foretold many things about the coming, the birth, the person, 
the sufferings, the death, and the final triumph and glory of the 

Redeemer 164 

4. Of the advent of the Messias ; 165 

5. Of the person of the Messias 167 

6. Of the sufferings of the Messias 168 

7. Of the glory of the Messias 169 

8. The Messias was announced through many types 169 



3. Preparation of Mankind for the Redeemer. 

1. God chose for Himself a special nation and prepared it for the 

coming of a Redeemer; this chosen people was the seed of Abra- 
ham, usually called by the name of Israelites or Jews 171 

2. The other nations of the earth were prepared for the coming of 

the Redeemer by contact with the chosen people, or by the in- 
fluence of exceptionally gifted men or by other extraordinary 
methods 174 

3. Before the arrival of the Redeemer God permitted that mankind 

should experience the deepest misery in order to rouse it to a 
longing for a Redeemer 174 



4. The Life and Times of the Redeemer. 

1. The Redeemer lived some nineteen hundred years ago and remained 

thirty-three years on the earth 176 

2. The work of the Redeemer was confined for the most part to 

Palestine 175 



6. Jesus of Nazareth is the Redeemer or Christ. 

1. Jesus of Nazareth is the Redeemer because all the prophecies have 

their fulfilment in Him 178 

2. Jesus of Nazareth is the Messias because the kingdom founded by 

Him on earth has been enduring 178 



Co7itents, 19 

PlOB 

3. Jesus Himself claimed the name of Redeemer 178 

4. The angels announced Him as the Redeemer 178 



6. The Life of Chbist. 
TJie Childhood of Christ. 

1. Christ was born of the Blessed Virgin Mary in a stable at Beth- 

lehem 179 

2. Christ spent the first years of His childhood in Egypt, and after 

that lived at Nazareth till He was thirty 182 



The Public Life of Christ, 

1. When Christ was thirty years old, He was baptized by John in the 

Jordan (Matt. iii. 13), and fasted forty days in the desert, where 

He was tempted by the devil (Matt, iv.) 183 

2. Christ taught for about three and a half years, gathered some 

seventy- two disciples, and from these chose twelve apostles 183 

3. Christ proved His divine mission and the trutti of His doctrine 

by many miracles, by His knowledge of all things, and by the 
holiness of His life 185 



The Sufferings of Christ 

1. On the Sunday preceding the feast of Easter Christ made a solemn 

entry into Jerusalem, and taught in the Temple during the days 
following 185 

2. On Holy Thursday evening Christ ate the Pasch with His disciples, 

instituted the Blessed Sacrament, and then went out to the 
Mount of Olives, where He suffered His agony and bloody sweat. . 185 

3. On Good Friday at noon Christ was nailed to the cross, on the 

hill of Calvary, just outside Jerusalem, and died on the cross 
about three o'clock 187 

4. During Easter Saturday, that is, on the greatest feast day of the 

Jews, Our Lord remained in the sepulchre 188 



The Exaltation of Christ, 

1. Immediately after the death of Christ His soul went down in 

triumph into the place where the souls of those justified under 

the Old Law were detained 188 

2. On Easter Sunday before sunrise Christ rose glorious from the 

tomb by His own almighty power 189 

3. Forty days after His resurrection Our Lord ascended into heaven 

from the Mount of Olives and now sits at the right hand of God 

the Father 191 



20 Contents, 



4. On the tenth day after His ascending into heaven Christ sent 

down the Holy Ghost on the apostles 192 



7. The Pebson of the Redeemeb. 

Jesus Christ, Our Redeemer, is the Son of God made man; hence He 

is God Himself 198 



The Incarnation of the Son of God. 

1. The second divine person became man in the womb of the Blessed 

Virgin Mary by the action of the Holy Ghost at the moment of 

the Annunciation 193 

2. The Father of Jesus is therefore God the Father in heaven; 

Joseph, the spouse of Mary, is only the foster-father of Jesus 194 

3. The Incarnation of the Son of God is a mystery which we cannot 

understand, but only admire and honor 194 

4. The Incarnation of the Son of God was necessary to give perfect 

satisfaction to the injured majesty of God 195 

5. The Second Person always remained God though He became man, 

and by the Incarnation He lost none of His dignity 196 

6. By the Incarnation of the Son of God all the members of the 

human race have acquired a special dignity 196 



WHAT TRUTHS FOLLOW FROM THE MYSTERY OF THE REDEMPTIOF? 

1. Christ is true God and true man; hence we call Him the God- 

man 197 

2. In Christ there are two natures, human and divine, which, despite 

their intimate union, are quite distinct 1D7 

3. In Christ there is only one person, and that person is divine 198 



Jesus Christ is the Son of Ood. 

1. Jesus Christ solemnly declared before the high priest that He was 

the Son of God (Matt. xxvi. 64) 200 

2. God the Father called Jesus Christ His Son on the occasion of 

His baptism in the Jordan and of the transfiguration on Mount 
Thabor (Matt. iii. 17; xvii. 5) 200 



Jesus Christ is Ood Himself. 

1. That Jesus Christ is God we learn from His own words and from 

those of His apostles 201 

2. That Jesus Christ is God we conclude from His miracles and 

prophecies 201 

3. That Jesus Christ is God we conclude from the elevation of His 

teaching and His character 202 



Contents, 31 

4. That Jesus Christ is God we conclude from the rapid spread of 

His teaching 208 



Jesus Christ is Our Lord. 

We call Christ "Our Lord" because He is our Creator, Redeemer, 

Lawgiver, Teacher, and Judge 204 



EIGHTH ARTICLE OF THE CREED: THE BOLT 0H08T. 
1. The Grace of the Holy Ghost is necessary to us. 

1. The Holy Ghost is the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity, and is 

therefore God Himself 205 

2. The Holy Ghost dispenses the graces which Christ merited by the 

sacrifice of the cross 205 

3. Hence the assistance of the Holy Ghost is absolutely necessary 

for salvation 205 



2. Action of the Holy Ghost. 
Actual Orace. 

1. The Holy Ghost influences our lives by enlightening the mind 

and strengthening the will. Such passing influence of the Holy 
Spirit is called " actual grace " 207 

2. The action of the Holy Spirit sometimes makes itself perceptible 

to the senses 208 

3. The Holy Ghost does not force us, but leaves us in perfect posses- 

sion of our free will 208 

4. The Holy Ghost acts on every man: on the sinner as well as on 

the just ; and more on Catholics than on non-Catholics and un- 
believers 209 

5. Actual graces are obtained by the performance of good works, 

especially by prayer, fasting, and almsdeeds ; and more especially by 
the use of the means of grace provided by the Church, by hear- 
ing of holy Mass, worthy reception of the Sacraments, and attend- 
ance at sermons 210 



Sanctifying Orace, 

When the sinner co-operates with actual grace, the Holy Ghost 
enters his soul, and confers on it a brightness and beauty which 
claim the friendship of God. This indwelling beauty of the soul 
is due to the presence of the Holy Spirit and is called " sanctify- 
ing grace." 211 



2% Contents. 

PASS 

2. Usually, however, the Holy Spirit makes His entry on the recep- 

tion of the Sacraments of Baptism or Penance 312 

3. When the Holy Spirit enters into us He brings with Him a new 

spiritual life 212 

4. Sanctifying grace is secured and increased by doing good works, 

and using the means of grace offered by the Church ; it is lost by 

a single mortal sin 215 

5. He who has not sanctifying grace is spiritually dead, and will 

suffer eternal ruin 216 

6. No one knows for certain whether he have sanctifying grace or 

will receive it at the hour of death 216 



The Seven Gifts of the Holy Ghost and the Extrdordinary Graces. 

1. The Holy Ghost gives to all who have sanctifying grace the seven 

gifts of the Holy Spirit, that is, the seven virtues of the soul, by 
which it easily responds to His light and inspirations 216 

2. The Holy Ghost gives to many graces of a rarer kind, for instance 

the gift of tongues, of miracles, of prophesy, of discernment of 
spirits, of visions, of ecstasies, etc 218 

3. The gifts of the Holy Spirit were conspicuous in a special degree 

in Jesus Christ, His holy Mother, the apostles, the patriarchs and 
the prophets of the Old Law^ and all the saints of the Catholic 
Church 219 



The Holy Ghost as Guide of the Church. 
The Holy Ghost maintains and guides the Catholic Church 219 

3. Appaeitions of the Holy Ghost. 

The Holy Ghost has appeared under the form of a dove, of fire, and 

of tongues, to signify His office in the Church 220 

NINTH ARTICLE OF THE CREED: THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. 
1. The Catholic Chubch and its Institution. 

1. The Catholic Church is a visible institution founded by Christ, in 

which men are trained for heaven 221 

2. The Church prepares man for heaven by carrying out the three- 

fold office which Christ conferred upon her; the office of teacher, 

of priest, and of shepherd 232 

3. The Lord and King of the Church is Christ. 222 

4. The Catholic Church consists of a teaching and a hearing body; 

to the former belong the Pope, bishops, and priests ; to the 
latter the faithful 223 



Contents. 23 



2. The Head of the Church. 

PAGS 

1. Christ conferred on St. Peter the primacy over the apostles and the 

faithful 223 

2. St. Peter was Bishop of Rome for some twenty-five years, and died 

Bishop of Rome ; and the dignity and power of St. Peter 
descended to the succeeding Bishops of Rome 224 

3. The Bishop of Rome is called Pope or Holy Father 224 



3. Bishops, Priests, the Faithful. 

1. The bishops are the successors of the apostles 226 

2. The priests are the assistants of the bishops 228 

3. A Catholic is one who has been baptized and professes himself to 

be a member of the Catholic Church 228 



4. Foundation and Spread of the Church. 

1. Christ laid the foundation of the Church when in the course of His 

teaching He gathered a number of disciples and chose twelve of 
these to preside over the rest and one to be Head of all 230 

2. The Church first began its life on Pentecost, when some three 

thousand people were baptized 280 

3. Soon after the descent of the Holy Ghost the apostles began to 

preach the Gospel throughout the world, in accordance with the 
commands of Christ, and founded Christian communities in many 
places 230 

4. When the great persecutions broke out the Church spread more 

rapidly over the earth 231 

5. In the Middle Ages nearly all the heathen nations began to enter 

the Church 232 

6. In later times many nations of the newly- discovered countries 

were converted 23S 

7. At present the Catholic Church numbers about 288,000,000 mem- 

beri ,. 234 



5. The €atholic Church is Indestructible and Infallible. 

Indestructibility of the Church. 

The Catholic Church is indestructible, i.e., it will remain till the end of 

the world 285 

The Infallibility of the Church. 

1. The Catholic Church is infallible in her teaching, i.e., the Holy 

Spirit assists the Church in such a manner that she cannot err 

in the preserving and announcing of revealed doctrine 237 

2, The Church delivers her infallible decisions through general coun- 

cils and through the Pope 287 



24 Contents. 

3. The Church pronounces infallible judgments in the following 
cases: on doctrines of faith and morals, and their meaning and 
interpretation; on the Holy Scripture and Tradition and their 
interpretation 240 

6. The Hiebabchy of the Church. 

1. The ministers of the Church fall into three classes ot aistinct 

dignity and power, bishops, priests, and deacons 241 

2. This hierarchy was in force in the time of the apostles 241 

3. The episcopal and priestly office was instituted by Christ Him- 

self; the diaconate by the apostles 242 

4. Besides these three classes there are other degrees varying in their 

powers; for example, Pope, cardinals, and archbishops 242 



7. Notes of the True Church. 

1. The true Church is that one which is most persecuted by the world, 

and which has received God's seal in the form of miracles 242 

2. The true Church is that one in which the successor of St. Peter is 

to be found 243 

3. The true Church is known by the following four marks: she is 

One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic 243 



8. The Catholic Church alone gives Salvation. 

1. The Catholic Church alone gives salvation; i.e., the Catholic Church 

alone possesses those means which lead to salvation; viz., the 
doctrine of Christ, the means of salvation appointed by Christ, and 
the teachers and guides of the Church established by Christ 245 

2. Hence every man is bound to become a member of the Catholic 

Church 245 

3. Whoever through his own fault remains outside the Church 

will not be saved 24^ 



9. The Relations between Church and State. 

1. The Church is, in its own department, absolutely independent of 

the State, for Christ left the teaching and government of His 
Church to the apostles and their successors, not to any temporal 
sovereign 247 

2. The Church is an essential factor in promoting the welfare of the 

State, for she teaches obedience to authority, prevents many 
crimes, incites men to noble endeavor, and unites together various 
nations 248 

3. The Church was from the earliest times the patron of true edu- 

cation and culture 249 



Contents, 25 



10. The Communion of Saints. 

PAOB 

1. The communion of saints is the union and intercourse of Catholics 

on earth, of the souls in purgatory, and of the saints in heaven. . . 251 

2. Catholics on earth, the souls in purgatory, and the blessed in 

heaven, are united with Christ, just as are the members of a body 
with the head 251 

3. All the members of the communion of saints have a share in the 

spiritual goods of the Catholic Church, and can help one another 
by their prayers and other good works. The saints alone in 
heaven have no need of help 251 



TEl^TH ARTICLE OF TEE CREED: TEE F0R0IYENES8 

OF SINS. 



(See the Chapter on Sin.) 



ELEVENTE AND TWELFTE ARTICLES OF TEE CREED: 
TEE LAST TEINOS. 



1. Death. 

1. At death the soul is separated from the body and enters the world 

of spirits; the body decays and falls into dust 254 

2. All men must die, because death is the consequence of original 

sin 254 

3. Death is terrible only to the sinner, in no wise to the just 255 



2. The Pabticular Judgment. 

1. Immediately after death follows the particular judgment 256 

2. After the particular judgment the souls of men go into hell, or 

heaven, or purgatory 257 



3. Heaven. 
Heaven ib the abode of everlasting joy , ,. 257 

4. Hell. 

1. Hell is the abode of everlasting torment 261 

2. The soul? of those who die in mortal sin go to hell 363 



36 Contents. 



6. Purgatory. 

PAOt 

1. Purgatory is a place where the souls of those must suffer for a time 

who, though dying without grave sin on their souls, have not 
done complete penance for their offences against God 264 

2. That there is a purgatory we learn from the teachings of Christ 

and especially from the practice and doctrine of the Church 265 

3. The faithful on earth can help the holy souls in purgatory by 

good works 266 



6. The Resurrection of the Body. 

Christ on the Last Day will raise the bodies of all men from the dead 
and unite them to the soul forever 



7. The General Judgment. 

1. Immediately after the resurrection the general judgment will take 

place 270 

2. The Day of Judgment is unknown to us, though certain signs have 

be«i revealed which are to herald its approach 273 



CHRISTIAN HOPE. 

1. The Essence of Christian Hopis. 

Christian hope is the confident expectation of all those things which 

Christ promised us with regard to the fulfilment of God's will 274 

1. As the reward of carrying out Grod's will, Christ has promised us 

eternal happiness and the means required for obtaining it 274 

2. Christian hope is based on faith 275 

3. He only who carries out God's will can hope for the good things 

promised by Christ 276 

4. A wholesome fear of falling into sin must always accompany 

Christian hope 276 

5. Christian hope is necessary for salvation 277 

6. Christian hope is a gift of God 277 



2. The Advantage op Christian Hope. 

1. He who hopes in God enjoys the special protection of God 277 

2. He who hopes in God can obtain everything from Him 278 

3. He who hopes in God is strengthened by God 278 

4. He who hopes in God is impelled to the performance of good 

works and heroic acts.. 278 



Contents, 2T 



3. The Object op Christian Hope. 

PAGB 

1. The •Christian may not rely on his own powers, on his fellow-mein, 

nor on earthly things more than on God 279 

2. The Christian may not despair 279 

3. The Christian must never presume on his trust in God's mercy 280 

4. The Christian may never tempt God 280 



PART II. 



K tTbe Commanbment0* 

I. WHAT COIOIANDMENTS (OR LAWS) HAS GOD GIVEN US? 

1. God has imprinted the natural law on the heart of every man; 

this forms the fundamental rule of 'human actions 281 

2. In addition to this natural law God gave to man solemn precepts, 

more especially the Ten Commandments, and the two precepts 

of charity. These are known as the revealed law 282 

3. Finally, God gives us commandments through His representatives 

upon earth, through the ecclesiastical and secular authorities. 
These laws are called ecclesiastical and civil laws 282 

4. From the knowledge of the law comes conscience; the conscious- 

ness, that is. whether an act is permitted or prohibited by 

the law 283 

5. God's commandments do not deprive men in any way of true free- 

dom 284 

II. THE TWO COMMANDMENTS OF CHARITY. 

1. The most important commandments are the two commandments 

of charity, that is to say, the love of God and the love of one's 
neighbor, for all the other commandments are comprised in them, 284 

2. Without the love of God and of our neighbor no man can be saved. 285 



in. THE PRECEPT OF THE LOVE OF GOD. 

1- We ought to love God (1), because Christ commands this; (2), 
because He is in Himself essentially the highest beauty and 
sovereign perfection; (3), because He loves us and continually 
bestows benefits upon us 286 

2. Our love to God is chiefly manifested by thinking of Him con- 

stantly, by avoiding Avhatever might separate us from Him, by 
laboring to promote His glory, and willingly accepting all that 
comes from His hand 287 

3. We must love God with all our faculties, and above all things else 

in the whole world 289 



28 Contents. 

PAOB 

4. The love of God is of great advantage to us: through it we are 

united to God here on earth, our minds are enlightened, our will 
is strengthened, we obtain pardon of sin, peace of soul, manifold 
proofs of God's favor, and after death celestial joys 290 

5. The merit of our good works and the degree of our future felicity 

is in proportion to the magnitude of our love for God 291 



IV. THE LOVE OF THE WORLD IS OPPOSED TO THE 
LOVE OF GOD. 

1. The love of the world consists in loving above all, money, or the 

gratification of one's appetite, or earthly honors, or anything 
else in the world, instead of giving the first place to God 

2. Through love of the world we incur the loss of sanctifying grace, 

and eternal felicity 



V. THE COMMANDMENT OF CHARITY TOWARDS OUR 
NEIGHBOR. 

1. We ought to love our neighbor because this is Christ's command; 

furthermore because he is a child of God, made after His image; 
and also because we are all descended from the same parents, 
and we are all called to attain eternal felicity 295 

2. The love of our neighbor shows itself in desiring the good of our 

neighbor from our heart; in abstaining from injuring him, and 

in doing him good 295 

3. We are commanded to love our neighbor as ourselves; but we 

are by no means obliged to love him better than ourselves 296 

4. All that we do to our neighbor, whether it be good or evil, we 

do to Christ Himself, for He has said, " What you did to one 

of these My least brethren, ye did it to Me " (Matt. xxv. 40) ... . 297 



VI. LACK OF CHARITY TO ONE'S NEIGHBOR. 

1. He who does not desire the good of his neighbor, but is envious 

of him, does not possess the love of his neighbor 298 

2. He does not love his neighbor who injures him, whether in regard 

to his life, his innocence, his property, his honor, or his household. 300 

3. Nor does he love his neighbor who performs no works of mercy. . . 300 



VIL LOVE OF ONE'S FRIENDS. 

Those are our friends whose principles are the same, and whose love 

is mutual, and based on religion 300 



VIIL THE COMMANDMENT TO LOVE OUR ENEMY. 

1. We ought to love our enemies because Christ commands it; He 
says: "Love your enemies, do good to them that hate you, 
pray for them that persecute and calumniate you " (Matt. v. 44) . 



Contents, 29 



2. The love of our enemy i9 shown in this: that we do not revenge 
ourselves on him, that we return good for evil, that we pray for 
him, and forgive him willingly 304 



IX. THE LOVE OF ONE'S SELF. 

The true love of one's self shows itself herein, that we strive to 
attain that which will procure our real happiness ; first and 
foremost our eternal felicity, and then such earthly things as 
are conducive to the attainment of eternal felicity 306 



X. THE TEN COMMANDMENTS OF GOD. 

1. The Ten Commandments were given by God to the Jews on Mount 

Sinai 306 

2. We Christians are bound to observe the Ten Commandments of God, 

both because God has imprinted them upon the human heart, and 
because Christ laid them upon us anew in a more full and per- 
fect form 307 

3. The Ten Commandments of God are arranged in order 307 

4. He who keeps all these commandments receives a great reward 

from God on earth, and after death he may look forward to 
eternal felicity as his portion 308 

5. Temporal and eternal chastisements await the man who grievously 

violates a single one of these commandments 308 



THE FIRST COMMANDMENT OF OOD. 

In the First Commandment God enjoins upon us to worship Him, 

and forbids idolatry and every false form of worship 309 

1. The Adobation or Worship of God. 

1. The adoration we pay to God consists in this: That we acknowl- 

edge both in our hearts and by our actions that He is Our Lord, 

and we are His creatures and His servants 310 

2. We worship God interiorly by acts of faith, hope, and charity. ... 310 

3. We adore God exteriorly by vocal prayer, sacrifice, genuflections, 

prostrations, folding of hands, striking the breast, etc 311 

4. We must pay supreme worship to God only, for He alone is the 

sovereign Lord of heaven and of earth 312 

2. Idolatry or the Worship of False Gods. 

1. Idolatry is the worship of a creature which is regarded as a deity: 

e.g., the sun, fire, animals, images, etc 313 

2. Another form of idolatry is when a human being gives up his 

whole self to a creature 314 

3. The service of idols is high treason against the majesty of God, 

and the most heinous of sins 314 



30 Contents. 



3. Foolish or Perverted Worship. 

PAOB 

1. Superstition, fortune- telling, spiritualism, and magic, are foolish 

and irrational forme of worship 815 

2. This perverted form of worship is a grievous sin 316 

SINS AGAINST THE FIRST COMMANDMENT. 

We sin against the First Commandment by neglecting prayer, by 

opposing religion, etc 317 

4. The Veneration of Saints. 

1. We honor the saints because they are the friends of God, princes 

of the heavenly court, and benefactors to ourselves ; also be- 
cause we obtain great graces from God through venerating them 318 

2. We venerate the saints if we entreat their intercession with God; 

if we celebrate their feasts, reverence their images and their 
relics; if we bear their name, claim their protection in matters 
of importance, and praise them in word and song. The best 
maimer in which to venerate them is to imitate their virtues 319 

5. The Veneration of the Mother of God. 

We pay greater honor to Mary, the Mother of Christ, than to any 

other saint 323 

1. We hold Mary in such great veneration because she is the Mother 

of God and our Mother 323 

2. Another reason why Mary is so highly honored throughout Christ- 

endom is because God has exalted her above all men and angels. . 324 

3. Finally, we entertain this great veneration for Mary, because her 

intercession is more powerful with God than that of any other 
saint 325 



6. The Veneration of Images of the Saints. 

1. We honor the images of the saints by giving them a place in our 

dwellings; we say our prayers before them, we salute them re- 
spectfully, we adorn them with offerings, we make pilgrimages 
to their shrines 329 

2. Through venerating the images of the saints, efficacious and often- 

times supernatural graces are obtained; they are also useful as 
a means of avoiding distractions in prayer, and affording us a 
silent admonition 330 

7. The Veneration of Relics. 

1. We honor the relics of the saints by preserving them with rever- 

ence, and visiting the spot where they are deposited 331 

2. We obtain many blessings from God by venerating relics 332 

8. The Extraordinary Worship of God. 
We can, moreover, honor God by taking an oath or by making a vow. 332 



Contents, 3 1 



The Oath. 

PAGK 

1. To swear or take an oath is to call God to witness that one is 

speaking the truth, or that one will keep a promise 383 



The Vow (^Solemn Promise). 

1. A vow is a promise voluntarily made to God to perform some good 

action 336 

2. The most important vows are the religious vows, that is to say, 

the solemn promise made voluntarily by persons entering a re- 
ligious Order, to follow the evangelical counsels 336 



THE SECOND COMMANDMENT OF OOD. 

We owe reverence to almighty God, because He is a Lord of infinite 

majesty and of infinite bounty 389 

1. In the Second Commandment, God commands us in the first place 

to show due respect to His divine majesty. This we must do in 
the following manner: We should call frequently upon the name 
of God with true and heartfelt devotion, especially at the com- 
mencement of all we do, and in time of trouble 339 

2. We ought to show respect for all that appertains to divine worship ; 

more especially for the servants of God, for holy places, sacred 
things, and religious ceremonies 340 

3. We ought frequently to praise and magnify almighty Grod, on ac- 

count of His infinite perfections and goodness, especially when He 
reveals His perfections in a special manner, or confers a benefit 
upon us 341 

4. Furthermore, God prohibits everything which is a violation of the 

reverence due to His divine majesty, and in particular; Taking 

the name of God in vain 341 

5. Swearing. By this is meant the use of holy names in a moment 

of anger as an imprecation against certain persons or things. , . . 342 

6. Indecorous behavior towards persons who are consecrated to the 

service of God, holy places, sacred objects or actions 343 

7. Blasphemy. Of this sin those are guilty who revile God, His saints, 

or speak contemptuously of objects connected with His worship. . 343 

8. Simony. This consists in selling spiritualities for money or the 

equivalent of money 345 



THE THIRD COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

Tn the Third Commandment of the Decalogue God commands us to 

sanctify the Sunday and to work six days in the week 347 



1. The Pbecept to Sanctify Sundays and Holydayb. 

1. God commands us to sanctify the seventh day, because on the 

seventh day He rested from the work of creation 347 

2. God commanded the Jews to keep holy the Sabbath day 347 



32 Contents, 

PAOK 

3. Sunday was appointed by the apostles as the day of rest instead of 

the Sabbath, because Christ rose from the dead on Sunday 348 

4. We are bound on Sunday to abstain from servile work and to 

assist at the public Mass; we ought moreover to employ this 
day in providing for the salvation of our soul, that is to say by 
approaching the Sacraments, by prayer, hearing sermons, reading 
spiritual books, and performing works of mercy 348 

SINS AGAINST THE THIRD COMMANDMENT. 

This commandment is transgressed by performing servile work, by 

carelessness at public worship, etc. 350 

Motives for the Sanctification of Sunday. 

God rewards those who keep holy His day, and its profanation is fre- 
quently punished 351 

2. The Precept of Labor. 

1. The obligation to work was laid upon mankind by God after the 

Fall as a penance 853 

2. Every individual who can work is bound to work. St. Paul says: 

" If any man will not work, neither let him eat " (2 Thess. iii. 

10 ) 353 

3. Every man is bound primarily to perform the work appertaining 

to his calling or station 353 

4. We must not forget God in what we do; before and during our 

work we should implore His aid and renew our intention 354 

5. Labor obtains a temporal and an eternal recompense, because it 

is a kind of divine worship. The temporal recompense is con- 
tentment and earthly happiness 355 



THE RELAXATIONS PERMITTED TO THE CHRISTIAN. 

It is lawful to seek relaxation, but one must not ove»rdo it 356 

THE SIX COMMANDMENTS OF THE CHURCH. 

1. The six precepts of the Church are an amplification of the Third 

Commandment of the Decalogue 357 

2. We are under a rigorous obligation to keep the commandments of 

the Church, for disobedience to the Church is disobedience to 
Christ 357 



1. The First Commandment of the Church: The Observance 
OF Sundays and Holydays. 

1. In the first commandment of the Church the solemn observance 

of the holydays is enjoined upon us. There are seven festivals 

of Our Lord, five of Our Lady, and three of the saints 358 

2. The holydays of obligation ought to be kept in the same manner 

as the Sundays; we must abstain from servile work and assist 

at holy Mass 359 



Contents, 33 



The Ecclesiastical Year. 

PAOB 

1. The ecclesiastical year is an annual commemoration and repre- 

sentation of the life of Christ, and of the time before and after 

His birth 359 

2. The ecclesiastical year begins upon the first Sunday in Advent. 

Its three principal feasts are Christmas, when the birth of Thrist 
is celebrated; Easter, the day of His resurrection; and Pente- 
cost, when the coming of the Holy Spirit is commemorated 360 

3. The aspect of nature corresponds to the three principal festivals. . 361 



2. The Second Commandment of the Chubch. 

By the second commandment of the Church the precept of fasting is 

laid upon us 36t 

In the second commandment of the Church we are ordered to abstain 
on all Fridays of the year; to fast during the forty days of Lent, 
on the Ember days, and on the vigils of certain feasts 362 

1. We are forbidden to eat meat on Friday, because on that day Our 

Lord died for us 362 

2. During the forty days of Lent only one full meal is to be taken, as 

a partial imitation of Our Lord's fast of forty days, and as a 
suitable preparation for celebrating the festival of Easter 363 

3. We ought to keep the fast of the Ember days strictly, in order to 

implore almighty God to send us good priests, and to thank 

Him for the benefits received during the past quarter 368 

4. We are also bound to fast on the vigils of certain feasts, in order 

the better to prepare ourselves for celebrating those feasts 363 

5. It is by no means the desire of the Church that we should fast to 

the injury of our health, or that we should thereby be hindered 
from performing the duties of our station 364 

6. Fasting is beneficial both for the soul and the body 365 



3. The Third and Fourth Commandments of the Church. 

1. In the third and fourth commandments the Church enjoins upon 
us the duty of approaching the Sacrament of Penance and re- 
ceiving holy communion at Easter. 866 



4. The Fifth Commandment of the Church. 

By the fifth commandment of the Church we are bound to contribute 

to the support of our pastors 368 

5. The Sixth Commandment of the Church. 

In the sixth commandment marriage with non-Catholics is forbidden, 
also the marriage of those who are related by blood (consan- 
guinity) to the third degree, inclusive, or by marriage (affinity) 
to the second degree inclusive. Marriages are not solemnized 
during fixed seasons. These penitential times are from the be- 
ginning of Advent until Christmas Day, and from Ash Wednes- 
day until Easter Sunday f t •». i ,». i ♦.♦♦♦ ♦ 368 



34 Contents, 



TEE FOURTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD, 

rAOB 

In the Fourth Commandment God enjoins upon us to honor His repre- 
sentatives upon earth, that is to say, our parents, and both the 
ecclesiastical and secular authorities 368 

1. OuE Duty towabds Oub Pabents. 

1. Our parents are to be honored, because they are God's representa- 

tives and our greatest benefactors 368 

2. We ought to honor our parents by respectful behavior, love, and 

obedience 369 

3. Our duty is the same in regard to those who are in authority 

over us, as it is to our parents ; our teachers and governors, 
masters and employers, and our elders in general 371 

Transgressions of the Fourth Commandment. 

1. He transgresses the Fourth Commandment of God who is dis- 
respectful towards his parents; who behaves rudely to them, 
is ashamed of them, etc 371 

How does God Reward the Observance of the Fourth Commandment f 

1. God promises long life, happiness, and blessings upon earth to 

children who honor their parents 372 

2. God threatens to send upon those who do not honor their parents 

shame upon earth, a miserable end, everlasting damnation 372 

2. Our Duty towards those in Authority. 

1. God has appointed two powers, the spiritual and the secular, for 

the direction of human society. To the spiritual power He has 
committed the guidance of souls, to the secular the mainte- 
nance of peace and order 373 

2. The highest spiritual authority was given by God to the Pope, 

the highest secular authority to the monarch of the land; in 
most countries the people have a share in the secular govern- 
ment 374 

3. Our duties towards Pope and king are similar to our duties towards 

God, for they are both His representatives 374 

4. He who grossly oflFends against either the ecclesiastical or secular 

authorities, has to expect the severe chastisement of God on 
earth, and punishment in the world to come 377 

3. The Duties op those who are in Authority. 
No Christian should strive for a position he is not competent to fill. . 378 

THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

In the Fifth Commandment almighty God forbids us to destroy our 
own life, or that of our neighbor, or to treat the lower animals 
with cruelty 380 



Co7itents, 35 



1. Our Duty in Respect to our own Life. 

PAOR 

1. Our body was created by God as an abode for our immortal soul. 380 

2. Since tne life ana health of the body are of great importance for 

the life of ths soul, and for our eternal salvation, we are bound 
to take precautions for the preservation of our health and of 
our iiie 381 

3. Furthermore we are under a strict obligation to do nothing that 

tends to destroy health or life. Consequently it is a sin to rashly 
hazard one's life, wantonly to injure one's health, or to take one's 
own life 382 



2. Our Duty in Regard to the Life of our Neighbor. 

A strict obligation is laid upon us to avoid everything that may 

destroy the health or life of our neighbor 384 

1. Accordingly it is sinful to wish ill to one's neighbor, to injure his 

health, to challenge him or accept a duel, or to put him to death 
unjustly and willingly 384 

2. He commits a still greater sin who destroys the spiritual life of his 

neighbor, either by tempting him to evil or by giving scandal. . . 386 

3. It is, however, lawful to wound or even to kill our fellow-man if 

he threatens to taks our life by violence, or anything that is 
absolutely indispensable to our life, and we have no other means 
of defence. This is called the right of self-defence 388 

4. He who has wrongfully injured his neighbor either physically or 

spiritually, is bound to repair the harm done to the utmost of his 
power 389 

3. Our Conduct in Regard to the Lower Animals. 

In our relations to animals it is our duty to care for their well-being, 
to refrain from tormenting them, not to kill any useful animal 
without a special reason, and finally not to treat them with 
exaggerated tenderness 391 



THE SIXTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

1. In the Sixth Commandment almighty God prohibits everything 

that might stain our own purity or that of our neighbor 392 

2. Sins against the Sixth Commandment of God are for the most part 

very grievous in God's sight and accordingly are severely pun- 
ished by Him 393 

THE SEVENTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

1. In the Seventh Commandment almighty God forbids us to wrong 

our neighbor in his goods and property 393 

1. The Right of Possession. 

1. Earthly goods are necessary to man's subsistence, such as food, 

clothes^ a dwelling-place, money, etc 394 

2. Personal property is justly obtained when it is either acquired by 

labor or by gift 394 



36 Contents, 

Sins against the Seventh Commandment. 

PAOS 

The Seventh Commandment expressly forbids: theft, robbery, cheat- 
ing, usury, injuring the property of another, detention of goods 
that have been found or lent, and the non-payment of debts 395 

1. We are in danger of committing mortal sin if we take from our 
neighbor as much as he requires to support him one day in a 
manner suitable to his position 397 

2. Restitution or Satisfaction. 

1. He who has purloined from his neighbor or wronged him in his 

property, is under a strict obligation to restore the stolen goods 

or make compensation for the damage done (Lev. vi. 1-5) 397 

2. If any one has unwittingly got stolen goods in his possession, he 

is bound to give them up to the rightful OM^ner, as soon as he 
becomes aware that they were stolen 398 

3. He who refuses either to give up the stolen property or to com- 

pensate for the loss sustained, will not obtain pardon of his sins 
from God nor absolution from the priest 398 



what are the reasons which ought to deter us from 
transgressing the seventh commandment ? 

People who wrong their neighbor in his property generally come to 
shame and poverty, often die unrepentant, and are in danger of 
everlasting damnation 



THE EIGHTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

In the Eighth Commandment God forbids us to detract from our 

neighbor's honor, or bear false witness of any kind 400 



1. The Prohibition against Injuring our Neighbor in his 

Honor. 

1. A good reputation is a precious possession, for it enables us to 

gain riches for time and for eternity 400 

2. Above all we ought to strive to acquire a good name among men, 

and for that reason we ought to let our good works be known, 
and we ought to defend our character if it be aspersed to any 
great extent 401 

3. Furthermore, we ought to refrain from everything that may wound 

our neighbor's honor: thus suspicion, detraction, slander, and 
abuse are forbidden, also listening with pleasure when our neigh- 
bor is spoken against 402 

4. He who has injured his neighbor's reputation is strictly bound to 

restore his good name; either by apologizing, if the offence was 
committed in private, or by publicly retracting his words, if they 
were spoken before others 405 

5. Those who do not endeavor to repair the harm they have done 

by slandejing their neighbor, cannot obtain pardon from God, 

Bor absolution from the priest 406 



Contents, 37 



WHAT ABE THE REASONS WHICH SHOULD D :TEB US FROM INJUBINQ 

ouB neighbor's good name? 

PAGE 

1. He who is severe in his judgment of his neighbor, will in his turn 

be judged severely by God 406 

2. The Command against Untruthfulness. 

God is truth itself; consequently He forbids every kind of falsehood, 

especially lying, hypocrisy, and flattery 407 

WHAT are the reasons WHICH SHOULD MAKE US REFRAIN FROM 

untruthfulness? 

1. The liar is like the devil and displeasing to God 409 

2. The pernicious habit of lying leads a man into mortal sin and to 

eternal perdition 410 

3. Whoso is really upright is like almighty God, is pleasing in His 

sight, and is esteemed by his fellow-men 411 

3. The Means of Preventing Sins of the Tongue. 

Sins of the tongue are avoided by checking talkativeness and being 

guarded in speech 412 

THE NINTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

(See Sixth Commandment.) 

THE TENTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

In the Tenth Commandment God forbids us to endeavor to possess 

ourselves of the property of another by unlawful means 413 

1. Socialism. 

1. In our own day a large proportion of the so-called Socialists or 

social democrats aim at depriving their fellow-men of their pri- 
vate property by unjust means 414 

2. All who endeavor by unlawful means to deprive their neighbor of 

his personal property, live in a state of mortal sin 417 



XI. THE WORKS OF MERCY. 

1. The Value of Earthly Goods and the Use to be Made of 

Them. 

1. Earthly riches do not of themselves make us better in God's sight. . 418 

2. Earthly goods have their value, however, because with them v,e 

can earn eternal felicity 418 

3. God is the Lord of all earthly riches; we are only His stewards. . 418 

2. The Precept to Perform Works of Mercy. 

i. Christ has strictly enjoined upon us to assist our neighbor who 
is in need with our earthly goods; for He will only grant ever- 
lasting happiness to those who have helped their felloAv-men who 
were in need 419 



38 Contents, 

PAGE 

2. The assistance we give to the needy, of whatever nature it may 

be, is an alms, or work of mercy 430 

3. The works of mercy are either spiritual or corporal, according as 

the necessities we relieve are spiritual or corporal 420 

3. The Several, Works of Mercy. 

1. The corporal works of mercy are: (1), To feed the hungry; (2), 

To give drink to the thirsty; (3), To clothe the naked; (4), 
To harbor the stranger; (5) To visit the sick; (6) To ransom 
the captive; (7), To bury the dead 431 

2. The spiritual works of mercy are: (1), To instruct the ignorant; 

(2), To counsel the doubtful; (3), To admonish sinners; (4), 
To bear wrongs patiently; (5), To forgive offences willingly; 
(6), To comfort the afflicted; (7), To pray for the living and the 
dead 422 

4. In what Spirit should the Works of Mercy be 
Performed ? 

We ought not to do good to our neighbor in order to be seen and 

praised by men 425 

5. Of WHAT Benefit are the Works of Mercy to us? 

1. Almsgiving obtains for us the remission of our sins; that is to 

say, the sinner obtains the grace of repentance, while the just 
man receives the pardon of venial sin, and the remission of the 
temporal penalty 437 

2. By almsgiving we obtain an eternal recompense, provided that at 

the time we are in a state of grace 428 

3. Almsgiving brings down upon us temporal blessings; God in- 

creases our means and gives us bodily health 428 

XII. THE DUTY OF GRATITUDE. 

1. For every act of mercy done to us, we are bound to render thanks, 

first to God and then to our benefactor; for God requires of us 

that we should be grateful for the benefits we receive 439 

2. By our gratitude we obtain fresh favors, whereas ingratitude brings 

misfortunes upon us 430 

XIII. THE POVERTY OF THE CHRISTIAN. 

Poverty is no disgrace in God's sight; the poor are beloved by God 

and save their souls more easily 431 



1&. (Boob Morfta, IDirtue, Sin, IDicc* 

I. GOOD WORKS. 

1. The name of good works is given to such voluntary actions on the 

part of man as are in conformity with the will of God, are per- 
formed for the love of God, and consequently will be rewarded 
by God 434 

2. The good works most pleasing in God's sight are these: Prayer, 

fasting, and almsdeeds 431 



Contents, 39 



3. Even the most trifling works are pleasing to God if they are done 

with tlie intention of promoting His glory 436 

4. Good works are necessary to salvation 436 

6. Through good works the sinner obtains the actual graces which 

are necessary for his conversion; the just man obtains an in- 
crease of sanctifying grace, eternal felicity, and the remission 
of the temporal penalty of sin; furthermore his prayers are heard, 

and sometimes earthly blessings are bestowed on him 437 

6. We can apply to others, either to the living or to the dead, the 

merit of our good w orks 438 

II. VIRTUE. 

1. Virtue consists in proficiency in the practice of good works, and 

the tendency of the will towards what is good, resulting from 
persevering exercise 439 

2. It is only perfect virtue, i.e., those acts of virtue which are per- 

formed for the glory of God, which will be rewarded after death . . 439 

3. Virtue can only be acquired and increased by dint of struggle 

and self-conquest; for many obstacles have to be encountered, 
inward hindrances, the evil proclivities of the human heart, and 
outward hindrances, the contempt and persecution of men 440 

4. Virtue procures for us real happiness both in time and in eternity . . 440 

THE DIFFERENT KINDS OF CHRISTIAN VIRTUE. 

1. The virtues that unite our soul to God are the three theological 

virtues: Faith, Hope, and Charity 442 

2. Those virtues which have the effect of bringing our actions into 

conformity with the moral law, are called moral virtues. These 
we gain for ourselves by our own exertions and the assistance 
of divine grace, after we have received sanctifying grace 443 

3. The principal moral virtues are the seven capital virtues: Hu- 

mility, obedience, meekness, liberality, temperance, chastity, dili- 
gence in what is good 444 

4. All the moral virtues proceed from the four cardinal virtues: 

Prudence, justice, temperance, and fortitude (Wisd. viii. 7) ..... . 444 

5. All perfect virtues spring from the love of God and are inseparably 

united together by that same love (1 Cor. xiii.) 446 

6. The greatest and noblest of all the virtues is charity 447 

7. The virtues can always be increased 447 

8. All perfect virtue is lost immediately upon falling into mortal sin, 

for thereby the love of God is lost, without which there can be no 
perfect virtue 448 

III. SIN. 

1. He who wittingly and willingly transgresses one of God's com- 

mandments is guilty of sin 449 

2. Sin is in its essence an unlawful turning towards the creature and 

turning away from God 450 

The Development of Sin. 

In the development of sin temptation first arises, then comes the 
resolutions to commit sin; after that, if opportunity offers, the 
exterior act is committed 451 



40 Contents, 



The Kinds op Sin. 

There are different kinds of sin. 

1. Sins are generally divided into sins of word, of thought^ and of 

deed 454 

2. A distinction also exists between our own sins, and the sins in 

which we co-operate 454 

The Compabative Magnitude of Sin. 

1. All sins are not equally great 456 

2. Many sins are so great that they separate us entirely from God, 

and deprive us of His friendship; they are called mortal or deadly 

sins. Sins of lesser moment are called venial sins 458 

3. He commits a mortal sin who consciously and of his own free 

will does grievous dishonor to God, or wrong to his neighbor in 
a weighty matter; who does injury to his own life, or to the life, 
the property, or the reputation of his neighbor 458 

4. He commits a venial sin who only injures something of trifling 

consequence, or who, though he injures something of great im- 
portance, injures it very slightly, or does so almost unconsciously 

and to some extent unwittingly 458 

6. All mortal sins are not of equal magnitude, nor are all venial 
sins of the same importance. The most heinous sins are the 
sins against the Holy Ghost, and those that cry to heaven for 
vengeance 456> 

6. He commits a sin against the Holy Ghost who persistently and 

wilfully resists the action of the Holy Ghost 459 

7. Sins that cry to heaven for vengeance are sins of great malice. 

They are: Wilful murder, oppression of the poor, defrauding 
laborers of their wages, and the sin of Sodom 460 

8. A distinction must be made between venial sins and imperfections. 

Imperfections are faults which are due not to a bad will, but to 
human frailty 461 

The Consequences of Sin. 

1, Mortal sin deprives a man of sanctifying grace, and delivers him 

into the power of the devil 463 

2. Mortal sin brings down upon the sinner both eternal damnation 

and temporal chastisement 463 

The Consequences of Venial Sin. 

1. Venial sin gradually leads to mortal sin, and eventuates in the 

loss of sanctifying grace 465 

2. There are temporal penalties due to venial sin, and these will 

come down upon us either on earth or after death in purgatory. . 465 

IV. VICE. 

1. Vice is proficiency in the practice of evil, and the confirmed tend- 

ency of the will towards evil which is acquired by habitual sin. 466 

2. Habitual sin makes a man supremely unhappy, because it deprives 

him completely of sanctifying grace, subjects him entirely to 
the dominion of the devil, and brings down on him many tem- 
poral judgments as well as eternal damnation 467 



Contents. 41 

PAGB 

3. The most ordinary sins are the seven capital sins: Pride, dis- 
obedience, anger, avarice, intemperance in eating and drinking, 
unchastity, sloth 468 

V. THE FORGIVENESS OF SIN. 

1. There is no man upon earth without sin; consequently there is 

none who does not need the forgiveness of sin 469 

2. We can obtain forgiveness of sin, because Christ merited it for 

us by the death of the cross; and because He gave power to 
forgive sins to His apostles and their successors 469 

3. Mortal sin is remitted y Baptism and penance; venial sin, and 

the temporal penalties due to it, by good works done in a state 
of grace. These good works are: Prayer, fasting, almsgiving, 
hearing holy Mass, receiving holy communion, use of the sacra- 
mentals, gaining indulgences, forgiving offences 470 

4. There is no sin too great for God to forgive here below, if it be 

sincerely repented of and humbly confessed , 470 

VI. TEMPTATION. 

1. Temptation is the action of the evil spirit upon our soul, in order 

to induce us to sin; he excites within us the concupiscence of 

the flesh, the concupiscence of the eyes, or the pride of life 471 

2. God allows us to be tempted out of mercy, and for the good of 

our souls 473 

3. We ought to protect ourselves from temptation by assiduous work, 

by keeping our thoughts fixed upon God, and by continual self- 
conquest 478 

4. When we are tempted we ought to betake ourselves immediately to 

prayer, or think of our last end or of the evil consequences 

of sin 474 

VII. OCCASIONS OF SIN. 

1. By occasions of sin are meant such places, persons, or things, 

which as a rule are the means of leading us into sin, if we go in 
quest of them 475 

2. To expose one's self heedlessly to an occasion of sin, is in itself 

a sin; it entails the loss of divine grace and leads to mortal sin. 475 

3. He who finds himself in circumstances which are an occasion of 

sin to him, and does not instantly leave them, although it is 
in his power to do so, commits a sin; he will be deprived of the 
assistance of divine grace and will fall into mortal sin 476 

4. He who refuses to give up what is to him an occasion of sin, can- 

not expect to obtain pardon of sin here, or eternal salvation here- 
after 476 

5. The most common and the most dangerous occasions of sin are: 

Liquor saloons, dancing saloons, bad theatres, bad periodicals 

and bad novels 477 

VIII. THE SEVEN PRINCIPAL VIRTUES AND THE SEVEN 
PRINCIPAL VICES. 

1. Humility. 

1. The humble man is he who acknowledges his own nothingness 
and the nothingness of all earthly things, and comports himself 
in accordance with this conviction 479 



42 Contents, 

2. Christ gave us in Himself the grandest example of humility, for 

He, being the Son of God, took the form of a servant, chose to 
live in great lowliness, was most condescending in His inter- 
course with men, and finally, voluntarily endured the ignomini- 
ous death of the cross 481 

3. Humility leads to greater sanctity, to exaltation, and to ever- 

lasting felicity 482 

2. The Opposite op Humility: Pbide. 

1. He is proud who overestimates his own worth, or the value of 

his earthly possessions and shows openly that he does so 483 

2. Pride leads to all manner of vices, to degradation here, and eitemal 

damnation hereafter; it also destroys the value of all our good 
works , 484 

3. Obedience. 

1. Obedience consists in being ready to fulfil the behest of one's 

superior 435 

2. Obedience is the most difficult and at the same time the most ex- 

cellent of all the moral virtues (St. Thomas Aquinas) 486 

3. By our obedience we accomplish the will of God most surely, and 

we attain certainly and quickly to a high degree of perfection. . . 487 

4. Disobedience. 

1. Disobedience consists in not fulfilling the commands of one's su- 

periors 487 

2. Disobedience brings temporal misfortune and eternal misery upon 

man , 488 

5. Patience, Meekness, Peaceableness. 
Patience. 

1. Patience consists in preserving one's serenity of mind amid all the 

contrarieties of this life, for the love of God 488 

2. Patience produces many virtues and leads to salvation 489 

Meekness. 

1. Meekness consists in showing for the love of God, no irritation 

when wrong is done us 490 

2. By meekness we gain power over our fellow-men, we attain peace 

of mind, and eternal salvation 490 



PeaceaUeness. 

1. Peaceableness consists in willingly making a sacrifice for the sake 

of remaining at peace with one's neighbor or reconciling one's 

self with him 492 

2. Peacemakers enjoy the special protection of God and receive a 

hundredfold as the reward of all that they give up for the sake 

of peace 492 



Contents, 43 

6. The Opposite of Meekness: Wrath. 

PAGE 

1. Wrath consists in exciting one's self about something at which 

one is displeased 493 

2. Those who indulge anger injure their health, temporarily lose the 

use of reason, make themselves hated, and incur the danger of 
losing eternal salvation 493 

7. Liberality. 

1. Liberality consists in being ready and willing, for the love of God, 

to give pecuniary assistance to those who are in need 495 

2. By liberality we obtain forgiveness of sin and eternal reward, 

and temporal blessings, besides a speedy answer to prayer and 

the friendship of our fellow-men 495 

8. The Opposite of Liberality: Avarice. 

1. Avarice consists in an inordinate craving for riches, which makes 

a man not only strive after them, but refuse to give any portion 

of his goods to the poor 495 

2. The avaricious are miserable both in time and in eternity; for 

the sake of money they commit all manner of sins, they lose 
the faith and their peace of mind, they are cruel to themselves 
and hardhearted to their neighbor, and finally perish eternally. . 496 

9. Temperance in Eating and Drinking. 

1. Temperance consists in not eating and drinking more than is 

necessary, and not being either too greedy or too dainty in re- 
gard to the nourishment one takes 498 

2. Temperance is highly advantageous to soul and body: it improves 

the health, lengthens life, strengthens the faculties of the mind, 
fosters virtue, and leads to everlasting life 498 

10. Intemperance in Eating and Drinking. 

1. Intemperance consists in eating and drinking much more than ia 

necessary, and in being greedy or dainty in regard to one's food. . 498 

2. By intemperance a man injures his health, weakens his mental 

faculties, destroys his reputation, and reduces himself to poverty; 
falls into vice, often comes to a miserable end, and is eternally 
lost 499 

11. Chastity. 

1. Chastity consists in preserving the mind and body free from 

everything that might stain their innocence 500 

2. Those who lead a life of chastity, possess the sanctifying grace of 

the Holy Spirit in abundant measure; they will be happy here on 
earth, and will enjoy special distinction in heaven hereafter 501 

12. Unchastity. 

1. Unchastity consists in thoughts, words or deeds which are de- 

structive of innocence 504 

2. Unchaste persons do not possess the sanctifying grace of the Holy 

Ghost, they are severely chastised by God in this life, and after 
death are condemned to eternal perdition 604 



44 Contents. 



13. ZEAIi IN WHAT IS GoOD. 

PAGE 

1. Zeal in what is good consists in working out one's salvation with 

all earnestness and fervor 505 

2. Without zeal in what is good we cannot be saved, for the kingdom 

of heaven suffereth violence 506 

14. The Opposite of Zeal: Sloth. 

1. Sloth consists in shunning everything that conduces either to our 

temporal or eternal well-being, provided it be toilsome 507 

2. Idleness leads to all kinds of vice; it brings misery in this life 

and eternal damnation in the life to come 507 



C. Cbrietian perfection* 

I. THE ASPIRATION AFTER CHRISTIAN PERFECTION. 

1. God requires of all the just that they should aspire to Christian 

perfection , 509 

2. The most sublime example of Christian perfection is found in 

Our Lord. After Him, the saints are also patterns of perfection. . 509 

3. The perfection of the Christian consists in charity towards God 

and his neighbor, and in detachment of heart from the things of 

this world 510 

II. GENERAL MEANS FOR THE ATTAINMENT OF 

PERFECTION. 

In order to make sure of attaining Christian perfection, the following 

means should be adopted 513 

1. Fidelity in small things 512 

2. A habit of self-control 512 

3. Abstinence from all that is superfluous, especially in regard to 

eating and drinking 513 

4. Order and regularity 514 

5. Unremitting prayer 514 

6. Frequent confession and communion 515 

7. Reading attentively the life of Our Lord and the lives of the saints, 

and meditation on the truths of religion 515 

8. Love of solitude 515 

III. SPECIAL MEANS FOR THE ATTAINMENT OF 

PERFECTION. 

1. He who aspires to a higher degree of perfection must follow the 

three evangelical counsels: Perfect obedience, perpetual chastity, 

and voluntary poverty 516 

2. These three counsels are called the evangelical counsels, because 

Our Lord gave them to us when He preached the Gospel, and fol- 
lowed them Himself • 518 

3. The evangelical counsels lead to higher perfection, because by their 

means the three evil concupiscences in man are completely de- 
stroyed, and the chief obstacles in the way of his salvation 
are removed 518 



Co7itents, 45 



PAGK 

4. Not every one is called of God to follow the evangelical counsels; 

for Our Lord says : " All men take not this word, but they to 
whom it is given " (Matt. xix. 11) 519 

5. The members of religious Orders are bound to follow the evan- 

gelical counsels, and likewise all persons living in the world, 

who have taken a vow to do so 519 

IV. THE EIGHT BEATITUDES. 

Those who scrupulously keep God's commandments are happy even 
on earth. Therefore God declared blessed those who are poor in 
spirit, the meek, they that mourn, they that hunger for His jus- 
tice, the merciful, the clean of heart, the peacemakers, and they 
that suflfer persecution for the right 521 



PART III. 

ZLbe flDeane of (Brace^ 

1. THE HOLY SACRIFICE OF THE MASS. 

1. On Sacrifice in Geneeal. 

1. The word sacrifice signifies the voluntary surrender or the destruc- 
tion of an object which we value, to give honor to God as our 
supreme Lord 526 

2. The Sacrifice of Christ upon the Cross. 

1. The sacrifice which reconciled God with man was that which 

Christ offered upon the cross 529 

2. The sacrifice of Christ upon the cross was a vicarious sacrifice for 

the sins of all mankind, and a sacrifice of superabundant value. . 530 
C. The graces which Christ merited for us by His death are com- 
municated to us by the means of grace; that is to say, the holy 
sacrifice of the Mass, the sacraments, the sacramentals, and 
prayer 531 

3. The Institution, Nature, and Principal Parts of the Mass. 

1. The Son of God offered a sacrifice at the Last Supper, because He 

gave His body and blood to be offered up, in order to reconcile 

His heavenly Father with man 532 

2. We call the sacrifice instituted by Our Lord at the Last Supper, 

holy Mass, or the sacrifice of the Mass 535 

3. What takes place in the sacrifice of the Mass is this: The priest 

at the altar, as the representative of Christ, offers up bread 
and wine to almighty God; he changes these substances into the 
body and blood of Christ, and destroys them by consuming them. 536 

4. There are three distinct parts in the sacrifice of the Mass: The 

offertory, the consecration, and the communion 537 



46 Contents, 

4. The Cebemonial of the Mass. 

PAOH 

1. In the course of time many ceremonies of deep significance grouped 

themselves around the holy sacrifice of the Mass, which were 

not to be omitted without absolute necessity 539 

2. The whole story of the Redemption is symbolically represented by 

the ceremonies of the Mass 540 

5. The Relation which the Mass bears to the Sacrifice of 

THE Cross. 

1. The sacrifice of the Mass is a living renewal of the sacrifice of the 

cross, for in the MasSj as upon the crosSj Christ immolates Him- 
self 541 

2. In the sacrifice of the Mass all the sacrifices made by Our Lord 

are also renewed 543 

6. The Profit to be Derived from the Holy Sacrifice of the 

Mass. 

1. By means of the holy sacrifice of the Mass the fruits of the sacri- 

fice of the cross are applied to us in most abundant measure; 
more particularly we obtain thereby forgiveness of sin, certitude 
that our prayers are heard, temporal blessings, and eternal re- 
wards 548 

2. Those who participate in the fruits of the holy sacrifice of the 

Mass are: First, the individual for whom it is celebrated; then 
the priest and all who are present; finally, all the faithful both 
living and dead; moreover the holy sacrifice gives joy to all 
the angels and saints 545 

7. The Celebration of Holy Mass. 

1. The holy sacrifice of the Mass is only offered to God; it may be 

offered to Him with a fourfold intention: By way of atonement, 

of petition, of praise, or of thanksgiving 547 

2. The holy sacrifice of the Mass may also be offered in honor of the 

angels or saints 548 

3. The holy sacrifice of the Mass can also be offered for the souls of 

the departed who have been members of the Catholic Church, 

and have not died in a state of mortal sin 548 

4. The holy sacrifice of the Mass can, however, be offered for the 

living, whether Catholics or non-Catholics 549 

8. The Value of the Sacrifice of the Mass. 

1. As the holy sacrifice of the Mass is an oblation of infinite value, 
to celebrate or to hear Mass is a good work which surpasses all 
other good works in excellence 550 

9. The Devotion at Holy Mass. 

We ought to be very devout at Mass; that is, we ought to banish 
from our minds all that may cause distraction, and endeavor 
to unite our supplications to those of the priest, especially in the 
three principal parts of the Mass 551 

1 Whispering, laughing, looking about at the time of Mass must be 
carefully avoided; moreover it is unseemly to come to Mass 
overdressed "'^^ 



Contents, 4tt 

PAGM 

2. When assisting at the holy sacrifice, we ought to unite our sup- 

plications to those of the priest, but it is not necessary to use 

the same prayers as he does 552 

3. At the three principal parts of the Mass we should to a certain 

extent suspend our private devotions, and fix our attention upon 
what is done at the altar 553 

4. It is an excellent practice immediately after the consecration to 

make to our heavenly Father a definite act of offering of His 
divine Son sacrificed upon the altar, and of His Passion and 
death 555 

5. At the communion, if we do not communicate actually, we ought 

to do so spiritually 555 

6. It is not possible to hear two or more Masses at the same time; 

therefore when in church we ought to follow one Mass attentively 

and not more than one 555 

10. The Obligation of Hearing Mass. 

1. Every Catljolic is bound, under pain of mortal sin, to hear the 

whole of one Mass devoutly every Sunday and holyday of obli- 
gation 556 

2. To hear Mass on week-days, if possible, is a highly commendable 

practice, for it may be the means of gaining the greatest graces. . 557 

11. The Time when Mass is to be Celebrated. 

The holy sacrifice of the Mass is generally to be celebrated between 

sunrise and noon 658 

12. The Place where Mass is to be Celebrated. 

The apostles celebrated the holy sacrifice on a table; during the per- 
secution of the Christians Mass was ofi'ered on the tombs of the 
martyrs 659 

13. The Vestments and Sacred Vessels used at Mass. 

The various portions of the sacerdotal vestments are commemorative 

of Our Lord's Passion 562 

14. The Colors of the Vestments. 

1. In the vestments worn by the priest at Mass, the Church makes 

use of five colors : White, red, green, purple and black 663 

2. These colors not only depict the course of Our Lord's life on earth, 

but serve as a constant admonition to us to lead a pious life. . . . 564 

15. The Language of the Mass. 

The Latin language is used in the services of the Church ; it helps to 

maintain her unity and preserves her from many evils 565 

16. Singing at Mass. 

The singing of which the Church makes use is called the Gregorian 

chant, congregational, and choir singing 566 



48 Contents. 



17. Hearing the Word of God. 

1. The Word of God is said to be the food of the soul, because it sus- 

tains the life and strength of the soul, as bread does that of the 
body 569 

2. Hence it is the duty of every Christian either to hear sermons 

frequently, or to read spiritual books and make a practical ap- 
plication of what he hears or reads 570 

3. Those who are assiduous in hearing sermons or reading spiritual 

books, will not have great difficulty in attaining eternal salva- 
tion 671 



n. THE SACRAMENTS. 

1. The sacraments are sensible signs instituted by Christ, by means 

of which the graces of the Holy Spirit are communicated to us. . 572 

2. Christ instituted seven sacraments: Baptism, Confirmation, Holy 

Eucharist, Penance^ Extreme Unction, Holy Orders and Matri- 
mony ' 573 

3. By the three sacraments. Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy Orders, 

there is imprinted upon the soul a certain spiritual and indelible 
mark or character, on account of which they cannot be repeated. . 574 

4. Two of the sacraments. Baptism and Penance, are instituted princi- 

pally with the object of conferring sanctifying grace where it 
was not already given; the five others with the object of in- 
creasing that gift 574 

5. Due preparation must be made before receiving the sacraments, in 

order to obtain the graces they convey 575 

6. Supposing the priest who administers the sacrament to be un- 

worthy, the graces of the Holy Spirit will still be communicated 

by means of the sacrament 576 



1. BAPTISM. 

1. This is what takes place at Baptism: Water is poured upon th«» 

head of the person to be baptized, and at the same time the 
words appointed by Our Lord are repeated ; the person is thereby 
cleansed from original sin and all other sins, he is gifted with 
habitual and sanctifying grace, and becomes a child of God, an 
heir of heaven, and a member of the Church 577 

2. Baptism acts spiritually as water does materially 578 

3. Baptism is indispensably necessary to salvation. Hence children 

who die unbaptized cannot enter heaven 579 

4. Hence it follows that parents ought to have their children baptized 

immediately after their birth, because new-born infants hover 
between life and death 580 

5. In case of necessity any one can administer Baptism and without 

the usual ceremonies 580 

6. If baptism by water is impossible, it may be replaced by the bap- 

tism of desire, or by the baptism of blood, as in the ease of those 

who suffer martyrdom for the faith of Christ 580 

7. In the early ages of the Church solemn Baptism was administered 

on three days of the year: Holy Saturday, the eve of Whit- 
sunday, and in the East on the eve of the Epiphany 581 



Contents, 4d 

2. CONFIRMATION. 

PAOH 

1. The ceremonial of Confirmation is as follows: The bishop lays 

his hands upon the candidates and anoints each one severally 
with chrism upon the forehead, with prayer; and those who are 
so anointed receive the gifts of the Holy Ghost, especially courage 
to profess their faith 585 

2. The supernatural effect of Confirmation is similar to the natural 

eflFect of oil 585 

3. Christians ought to be confirmed at the age when they pass from 

childhood to youth, because at that period temptations thicken 
around them, and they need strength of will to resist them 586 

4. The candidate for Confirmation ought previously to go to con- 

fession, and if possible to holy communion; for to receive this 

sacrament one must be in a state of grace 587 

6. Confirmation is usually administered about Whitsuntide, as the 

bishop visits the whole of his diocese at intervals of a few years. 5H7 

3. THE HOLT EUCHARIST. 
Institution and Nature of the Holy Eucharist. 

1. The body of Christ under the appearance of bread, and the blood 

of Christ under the appearance of wine, is called the Most Holy 
Sacrament of the Altar 589 

2. The presence of the body and blood of Christ under the appearance 

of bread and wine is a mystery, because our feeble reason can- 
not comprehend it 590 

3. It is most true that under the species of bread, as also under the 

species of wine, Christ is present, God and man, whole and entire. 591 

4. Our Lord is present in every particle, however minute, of the 

consecrated bread and wine 592 

5. Christ is present in the consecrated elements as long as the acci- 

dents of bread and wine remain 592 

6. The duties of the Christian *n regard to the Holy Sacrament of 

the Altar are these: He ought to visit it frequently, to adore it» 

and to receive it »...-, 592 

The Necessity of Holy Communion. 

1. The Holy Sacrament of the Altar is the nourishment of our souls. . 594 

2. We are bound under pain of mortal sin to communicate at least 

once a year, and that at Easter; also in case of dangerous ill- 
ness. It is, moreover, the wish of the Church that the faithful 
should, if possible, receive holy communion on Sundays and 
holydays ' . . 596 

The Effects of Holy Communion. 

Holy communion acts spiritually, as bread and wine act materially. . . 697 

1. By holy communion we are united more closely to Christ. Our 

Lord says : " He that eateth My flesh and drinketh My blood, 
abideth in Me, and I in him " (Jolin vi. 57) 597 

2. Holy communion imparts actual graces, and also maintains and 

increases sanctifying grace in the soul 598 

3. "^he force of evil concupiscence is lessened by holy communion, and 

>ve are freed from venial sin by means of it 598 

* Holy sotnmunion often affords much -ijfreshment to thti soul. . . . . , 699 



50 Contents. 

Preparation for Holy Communioit. 

PAQK 

1. We must make a suitable preparation of body and soul before 

receiving holy communion 599 

2. The manner in which we should prepare our soul is this: We 

must cleanse our souls from mortal sin by confession, perform 
good works and adorn ourselves with the virtues 600 

3. Our body must be prepared for holy communion by fasting from 

midnight; by dressing in a neat and suitable manner, and by 

a reverent deportment at the time of communion 602 

Behavior after Receiving Holy Communion. 

After receiving communion we should make our thanksgiving, and 
proffer our petitions to almighty God, praying for the Pope, 
for the authorities, secular and ecclesiastical, for our relatives, 
friends, and benefactors, and for the holy souls in purgatory 603 

Spiritual Communion. 

Spiritual communion consists in awakening within the heart a lively 

desire to receive holy communion 604 

4, THE SACRAMENT OF PENANCE, 

The Nature and the Necessity of Penance. 

1. In the Sacrament of Penance the repentant Christian confesses 

his sin to a duly-authorized priest, who, standing in the place 
of God, pronounces the absolution by means of which they are 
forgiven 605 

2. The Sacrament of Penance is indispensably necessary for those who 

have fallen into sin after Baptism, for without this sacrament 
they are unable to recover the justice they have lost 606 

3. Let no one be deterred by a feeling of shame from confessing 

his sins; the priest dare not, under any pretext, reveal what is 
said in the confessional, and he is ever ready to receive the con- 
trite sinner kindly 607 

4. He who from a sense of shame conceals a mortal sin in confession, 

does not obtain forgiveness, but only adds to his other sins that 
of sacrilege, and exposes himself to the grave risk of dying 
impenitent 608 

The Confessor. 

1. No priest can give absolution who has not received the faculties 

for hearing confessions from the bishop of the diocese 609 

2. Priests who are duly authorized to hear confessions, have not 

power to absolve from all sins, since there are certain sins Avhich 

the Pope or the bishop has reserved to himself for judgment 609 

3. In the confessional the priest stands in the place of God: there- 

fore the penitent is bound to yield him obedience 609 

4. Under no possible conditions may the priest repeat anything out 

of the confessional 610 

6. Every Catholic is perfectly free to choose his own confessor 611 



Contents, 51 

The Effects of Penance. 

By worthily receiving the Sacrament of Penance we obtain the fol- 
lowing graces 612 

1. The guilt of sin is remitted and the debt of eternal punishment; 

yet there remains the debt of temporal punishment to be dis- 
charged 613 

2. The Holy Spirit returns to the repentant sinner, and imparts to 

him sanctifying grace; and the merits of all the good works he 
formerly performed while in a state of grace are restored to him 
again 613 

3. Through the indwelling of the Holy Ghost we obtain great peace 

of mind, nay, great consolations, if our conversion be sincere 613 

4. The Holy Ghost imparts to us the strength necessary to over- 

come sin 614 

The Worthy Reception of the Sacrament of Penance. 

In order to receive the Sacrament of Penance worthily, we must do 

as follows : 615 

1. We must examine our conscience, i.e., we must carefully consider 

what sins we have committed and not yet confessed 615 

2. We must truly repent of our sins, that is, we must grieve from our 

heart that we have offended God by them, and the thought of 
offending Him must be abhorrent to us 617 

The means of awakening true contrition is to reflect that by our sins 
we have grievously offended the infinite majesty of God, and 
have displeased our loving Father, our greatest Benefactor 616 

The consideration that we must expect the just judgments of God on 

account of our sins, also disposes us to trne contrition 620 

Confession without contrition does not obtain the divine forgiveness. . 621 

3. We must make a firm resolution, that is, we must steadfastly 

determine with the help of God to desist from all sin, and to 
avoid the occasions of sin for the future 621 

4. We are under the obligation of confessing our sins, that is, we 

must secretly to the priest enumerate all the mortal sins of which 
we are conscious, accurately, simply, and humbly; with the num- 
ber of times we have committed them, besides all that is neces- 
sary to make known the nature of the sin 622 

5. Satisfaction must be made: i.e., we must perform the penance en- 

joined upon us by the confessor 62^ 

The confessor generally enjoins upon the penitent, prayer, almsdeeda, 
and fasting as works of penance, in order that he may thereby 
discharge the temporal penalties, and weaken the power of evil 

tendencies 624 

We should, besides, make satisfaction by punishments voluntarily 
undertaken of ourselves; and also by bearing patiently the tem- 
poral scourges inflicted of God 625 

The works of penance which we perform and the sufferings which 
we bear patiently do not only cancel the temporal punishment 
due to our sins, but they contribute to the increase of our 
eternal happiness 626 

General Confession. 

By general confession is meant confession of all the sins we have com- 
mitted within a considerable period of time o . . 625 



Contents, 



Confession a Divine Institution. 

1. Confession of sins was instituted by Our Lord, and has been the 

practice of the Church in all centuries 635 

2. The institution of confession affords us proof of the infinite mercy 

and wisdom of God 628 

The Advantages of Confession. 

Confession is extremely useful both to individuals and to society in 

general 628 

The Sin of Relapse. 

1. He who after his conversion, relapses into mortal sin, is in danger 

of dying impenitent, because the devil acquires great power over 

him and the influence of the Holy Spirit is lessened 630 

2. If any one should relapse into mortal sin, let him forthwith repent 

and go to confession; for the longer penance is delayed, the 
more difficult, the more uncertain conversion will be 630 

3. If, through frailty, we fall into venial sin, we must not be dis- 

quieted on that account, but humble ourselves before God 630 

4. Since we cannot possibly continue in a state of grace until death 

without the special assistance of the Holy Spirit, let us fervently 
implore of God the grace of final perseverance 631 

Indulgences. 

1. God has granted to the Church the power, after the reconciliation 

of the sinner with God, of changing the punishments yet remain- 
ing due to sin into works of penance^ or of remitting them 
altogether 638 

2. The remission of the temporal punishment due to us on account 

of our sins is called an indulgencej and is obtained by the per- 
formance, while in a state of grace, of certain good works en- 
joined on us by the Church 634 

3. An indulgence is either plenary, when a full and entire remission 

of all the temporal punishment due to sin is gained, or partial, 
when only a portion of the temporal punishment is remitted 636 

4. The Pope alone has power to grant indulgences which are for the 

whole Church; for in him alone jurisdiction over the Avhole 
Church is vested, and he is the steward of the Church's treasures- 639 

5. Indulgences may also be applied by way of suffrage to the suffer- 

ing souls in purgatory, if this be expressly stated respecting the 
indulgence; a plenary indulgence is gained for them every time 
the holy sacrifice of the Mass is offered on a privileged altar. . . . 639 

6. The gaining of indulgences is most salutary, because we thereby 

keep far from us temporal evils, and are stimulated to the ac- 
complishment of good works 639 

5. EXTREME UNCTION. 

1. In administering Extreme Unction the priest anoints the Christian 
who is in danger of death with the holy oils upon the organs of 
his five senses, and prays over him; by means of which the 
spiritual and not infrequently the bodily malady of the sick man 
is cured ^0 



Contents. 53 



2. Extreme Unction acts spiritually as oil does materially; it 

strengthens, heals, and aids the soul to attain eternal salvation . . 640 

8. Extreme Unction can only be administered to persons who are in 
danger of death; and they ought to receive it without delay 
for the sake both of their physical and spiritual health 642 

* Before being anointed the sick man ought to confess his sins, and 
receive holy communion and afterwards the Papal blessing ia 
generally given to him 642 

6. HOLY ORDERS. 

1. At the administration of Holy Orders the bishop lays his handti 

on the candidates for ordination, calls down upon them the Holy 
Ghost, anoints their hands, and presents the sacred vessels to 
them 643 

2. The ofl&ce of the priesthood, to which a man is raised by Holy 

Orders, is one of great dignity, but likewise one of no slight 
difl5culty and of vast responsibility 644 

3. The Sacrament of Holy Orders only confers the perpetual power, 

not the right, to exercise the functions of a priest. The newly- 
ordained cannot therefore make use in any place of their sacer- 
dotal powers, until they have received ecclesiastical authorization. 646 

4. No one can be admitted to priest's Orders who has not attained 

the age of twenty-four years 647 

5. Six other orders of ministry precede the priesthood, four lesser 

and two greater 647 

7. MATRIMONY. 
The Institution and Nature of Matrimony. 

1. God Himself instituted matrimony in the beginning of the world, 

for the procreation of the human race, and the mutual assist- 
ance of husband and wife 649 

2. Christian marriage is a contract between man and woman, binding 

them to an undivided and indissoluble partnership, and confer- 
ring on them at the same time grace to fulfil all the duties re- 
quired of them 650 

3. Civil marriage is to be distinguished from Christian marriage, 

inasmuch as it is no sacrament, and consequently in the sight of 

God no true and real marriage for Catholics 650 

The Characteristics of Matrimony. 

According to the ordinance of Christ, Christian marriage is strictly 

a union of two persons only, and it is indissoluble 652 

The Graces Conferred in Matrimony. 

The Sacrament of Matrimony confers upon Christians who embrace 
that state both an increase of sanctifying grace, and in addition 
the special graces necessary to enable them to discharge the 
duties required of them 653 

Impediments to Matrimony. 

A marriage can only be concluded in the absence of all impediments 
to it. The impediments may b© such as nullify marriage, or 
such as render it unlawful 654 



64 Contents, 



The Celebration of Matrimony. 

1. Marriage must be preceded by betrothal, by the publication of the 

banns, and by the reception of the Sacraments of Penance and 

of the Altar.' 656 

2. The Church expressly commands that the marriage be concluded 

in the presence of the priest of the parish, and two witnesses; 
or the parish priest may authorize another priest to act in his 
place 658 

3. Marriages are, as a rule, celebrated in the forenoon, in the house 

of God, with solemn ceremonies, and Mass is usually said at the 
same time 658 



The Duties of the Married. 

It is the duty of the wife to obey her husband; it is the duty of the 

husband to protect and shield his wife 659 



Mixed Marriages. 

1. Mixed marriages, by which is understood the marriage of Catholics 

to non-Catholics, have always been disapproved of by the Church . 664 

2. The Church tolerates mixed marriages on three conditions 665 

3. The Catholic who contracts a mixed marriage without the bene- 

diction of the Church, commits a mortal sin, and cannot be 
admitted to the sacraments 666 



The Unmahried State. 

1. The unmarried state is better than the married, because those 
who do not marry have far more opportunity for attending to 
their spiritual welfare, and can attain a higher degree of glory 
hereafter 667 



III. THE SACRAMENTALS. 

The sacramentals are rites which have some outward resemblance 
to the sacraments instituted by Christy but which are not of 
divine institution. The name is applied both to the blessing or 
consecration given by the Church, and to the objects blessed 
or consecrated 668 

The blessing consists in this, that the minister 'of the Church invokes 

the divine benediction upon certain persons or things 668 

1: Consecration by the Church consists in this: That the ecclesiastic 
empowered for this purpose, sets apart some person or some ob- 
ject, and dedicates him or it to the exclusive service of God. . . . 669 

2. Our Lord sanctioned the use of sacramentals, but the rites them- 

selves are an institution of the Church 670 

3. The use of blessed or consecrated objects is profitable; for if used 

with pious dispositions, they increase our fear and love of God, 
remit venial sins, and preserve us from many temptations 
and from bodily harm; excepting such temptations and ills of 
the body as are for our spiritual welfare 670 



Contents. 55 

IV. PRAYER. 
1. The Nature of Prayer 

PAGE 

i. Prayer is the elevation of the heart to God 671 

2. We may pray either in spirit only, or with the lips as well 672 

3. Our prayers have a threefold object: That of praise, of supplica- 

tion, and of thanksgiving 673 

2. The Utility and Necessity of Prayer. 

1. By means of prayer we can obtain all things from God: but He 

does not always grant our petitions immediately 674 

2. By means of prayer sinners become just, and the just are enabled 

to continue in a state of grace 676 

3. By prayer we obtain the remission of the temporal penalty due 

to sin, and merit an eternal recompense 677 

4. He who never prays cannot save his soul; for without prayer he 

will fall into grievous sins 677 

3. How Ought we to Pray ? 

If prayer is to be of utility to us, we must pray: 

1. In the name of Jesus, that is, we must ask what is in accordance 

with Our Lord's desires 678 

2. We must pray with devotion, that is we must fix our thoughts 

on God when we pray 678 

3. We must pray with perseverance, that is, we ought not to desist 

from prayer, if our petition is not immediately granted. 679 

4. When Ought we to Pray? 

1. As a matter of fact we ought to pray continually, for Our Lord 

requires of us " Always to pray and not to faint " (Luke xviii. 1 ) . 681 

2. We ought to pray more especially every morning and evening, 

before and after meals, and when we hear the Angelus 682 

3. Furthermore we ought to pray in the hour of affliction, distress, 

or temptation, when entering upon an important undertaking, 

and when we feel an inspiration and desire to pray 684 

5. Where Ought we to Pray? 

1. We can and ought to pray in every place, because God is every- 

where present 684 

2. The house of God is the place especially set apart for prayer 685 

3. A solitary place is also suitable for prayer 685 



6. For What Ought we to Pray? 

1. We ought to implore of God many things and great things; bene- 

fits not appertaining to time so much as to eternity 685 

2. We ought more especially to beseech almighty God to grant us 

such things as are conducive to His glory, and to our salvation, 
and in no wise to ask for what Avill only serve to gratify our 
earthly desires ' 68^ 



56 Contents, 

7. Meditation. 

Meditation consists in dwelling on the truths of religion in order to 

awaken good resolutions in our mind 080 

THE MOST IMPORTANT PRATERS. 
The Our Father. 

1. The Our Father takes precedence of all other prayers; it is 

especially distinguished by its power, its simplicity, and its com- 
prehensiveness 687 

The Our Father consists of an address, seven petitions, and the 

word Amen 688 

2. The address places the soul in the right disposition for prayer; 

it awakens within us confidence in God and raises our thoughts 

to Him 688 

3. In the first petition we pray that God may he glorified 688 

4. In the next three petitions we ask for these blessings: Eternal 

salvation, grace to fulfil the divine will, and the possession of 
those things which are indispensable to the maintenance of our 
earthly existence 688 

5. In the next three petitions we pray that three evils may be averted 

from us: The evil of sin, the evil of temptation, and those evils 
which are prejudicial to life 689 

6. The word Amen is the answer of God to the suppliant: in this 

place it is equivalent to the words: Be assured that thy prayer 

is heard 689 

The Ave Maria. 

1. The Ave Maria consists of three parts: The salutation of the 

archangel Gabriel, the greeting of Elizabeth, and the words of 

the Church 690 

2. The Ave Maria is a most potent prayer, and one which is full of 

meaning 690 

The Angelas. 

The Angelus is a prayer which is to be recited morning, noon, and 
night, when the bell rings, in honor of the Mother of God and 
in adoration of the mystery of the Incarnation 693 

The Rosary. 

1. The Rosary is a prayer in which the Our Father, followed by ten 
Hail Marys, is repeated five or fifteen times, accompanied by 
meditation on the life, the Passion, and the exaltation of the 
Redeemer 694 



The Litany of Loretto and the Salve Regina. 

The litany takes its origin and name from the place of pilgrimage, 

Loretto, in Italy. The Salve Regina was composed in 1009 696 



Contents* 57 



THE PRINCIPAL DEVOTIONAL EXERCISES, 

PAGE 

1. There are ordinary and extraordinary practices of devotion 697 

2. The regular services held in the parish church on Sundays and 

holydays both in the forenoon and the afternoon, as well as 
week-day services, belong to the ordinary practices of devotion. . 697 

3. Processions, pilgrimages, the Way of the Cross, Exposition of the 

Blessed Sacrament, and missions, belong to the extraordinary 
practices of devotion 697 

Processions. 

1. Processions are a solemn religious ceremony, during which prayers 

are recited in common by those who take part in them 697 

The ceremonial observed in our Christian processions is intended to 
portray the truth that we have not here a lasting city, but we 
seek one to come (Heb. xiii. 14) 697 

2. The Church holds processions either for the purpose of setting be- 

fore us more forcibly certain events in the life of Christ, 
certain doctrines of the faith, or in order to obtain speedy help 
from God; on these occasions an opportunity is afforded us of 
testifying in a public manner our faith and our loyalty to the 
Church 698 

3. The following processions form part of the ritual of the Church 

everywhere 698 

The procession on the feast of the Purification 698 

The procession on Palm Sunday 699 

The procession on Holy Saturday 699 

The procession on the feast of Corpus Christi 699 

The procession on St. Mark's Day 699 

The procession on the three Rogation days 700 



Christian Burial. 

1. Christian burial is a solemn service accompanied by special cere- 
monies in which the remains of a departed Catholic are carried 
in procession to the place of interment 700 

Pilgrimages. 

1. Pilgrimages are journeys made to sacred places, where God often- 

times vouchsafes to give miraculous assistance to the suppliant. . 703 

2. The places of pilgrimage are either the holy places in Palestine, 

spots sacred to the holy apostles, or shrines of the blessed Mother 

of God 703 

3. The object for which, as a rule. Christian people visit places of 

pilgrimage is to beseech the divine assistance in seasons of deep 
aflliction, or to fulfil a vow 705 



TJie Way of the Cross. 

1. The Way of the Cross is the name given to the fourteen stations 
which depict the way along which Our Redeemer passed, bearing 
His cross, from Pilate's palace to Mount Calvary 706 



58 Contents, 

Exposition of the Most Holy Sacrament. 

PA09 

The solemn exposition of the Blessed Sacrament consists in placing 
the sacred Host in a monstrance, unveiled, for the worship of 
the faithfxU 707 

Missions and Retreats. 

Missions consist of sermons and other religious exercises; retreats 

have much the same effect as missions 708 

CatJwlic Congresses and Passion Plays. 

1. Catholic congresses are public meetings of Catholics for the pur- 

pose of taking counsel together and passing resolutions suited 

to the times and to the present needs of the Church 709 

2. Passion play is the name given to the portrayal of Our Lord's 

Passion, and other biblical events in a series of tahleauw vivants. 710 

Religious Associations. 

1. Religious associations are voluntary societies formed among the 

faithful, with the object of furthering their own salvation or 

the salvation of their fellow-men 711 

2. Religious associations may be divided into confraternities or sodali- 

ties and charitable societies 711 

TJie Third Order of St. Francis. 

The Third Order was founded by St. Francis of Assisi for the sake 

of seculars 713 

TJie More Widespread Confraternities. 

The Society for the Propagation of the Faith, of the Holy Childhood, 
the Confraternity of St. Michael, the Confraternity of the Blessed 
Sacrament, the Confraternity of the Holy Rosary, the Holy Scapu- 
lar, the Holy Ghost, etc., etc., are the widest known in the 
Church 714 

The Apostleship of Prayer. 

The Apostleship of Prayer is a league of prayers in union with the 

Sacred Heart 718 

Charitable Societies. 

Charitable societies are the best embodiments of God's second precept 

of charity 718 



DEVOTIONS. 



I. Prayers and Precepts of the Church. 

1. The Sign of the Cross. 

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy- 
Ghost. Amen. 

2. The Lord's Prayer, or Our Father. 

Our Father, Who axt in heaven, hallowed be Thy name. Thy 
kingdom come. Thy will he done on earth as it is in heaven. 
Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive ns our trespasses 
as we forgive those who trespass against ns. An-d lead ns not 
into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen. 

S. The Angelical Salutation, or Hail Mary. 

Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee. Blessed art 
thou amongst women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus. 
Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the 
hour of our death. Amen. 

4. The Apostles* Creed. 

^ I believe in God, the Father almighty. Creator of heaven 
and earth ; 2 and in Jesus Christ, His only Son, Our Lord : ^ Who 
was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary, * suf- 
fered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified ; died, and was buried. 
^ He descended into hell ; the third day He arose again from 
the dead ; ^ He ascended into heaven, sitteth at the right hand 
of God, the Father almighty ; '^ from thence He shall come to 
judge the living and the dead. [That is to say, those who are 
alive at the Last Day, and who, as a matter of course, must die 

59 



60 Devotions, 

before the final judgmeoit ; besides those who died previously ; or 
it may also mean the redeemed and the reprobate.] ^ I believe 
in the Holy Ghost ; ^ the holy Catholic Ohnreh, the communion of 
saints^ ^^ the forgiveness [remission] of sins, ^^ the resurrection 
of the body, ^^ and the life everlasting. Amen. 

5. The Two Precepts of Charity. (Mark xii. 30, 31.) 

(1). Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with thy whole heart, 
and with, thy wihole soul, and with thy whole mind, and with thy 
whole strength. 

(3). Thou sfhalt love thy neighbor as thyself. 

6. The Ten Commandments of God. (Exod. xx. 1-1 "5.) 

(1). Thou shalt have no strange gods before Me. [That is t 
say, thou shalt believe in the one true God alone, and not. worship 
any other.] 

(2). Thou shalt not t^ike the name of the Lord thy God in 
vain. [That is, thou shalt not utter the name of God irreverently.] 

(3). Thou shalt keep holy the Sabbath day. [Under the Chris- 
tian Dispensation the Sanday.] 

(4). Thou shalt honor thy father and thy mother, that thou 
mayst be long-lived upon the land which the Lord thy God will 
give thee. 

(5). Thou shalt uot kill. 

(6). Thou shalt not commit aldultery. 

(7). Thou shalt not steal. 

(8). Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor. 

(9). Thou .ohalt not covet thy neighbor's wife. 

(10) Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house, nor his serv- 
ant, iior his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is his. 

7. The Six Precepts of the Church. 
iThese are an amplification of tlie Third Commandment of God.) 

(1). To hear Mass on Sundays and holydays of obligation. 

(2). To fast and abstain on the days appointed. 

(3). To confess at ledst once a year. 

(4). To receive the Holy Eucharist during the Easter time. 

(5). To contribute to the support of our pastors. 

(6). Not to marry persons who are not Catholics, or who are 



Devotions. 61 

related to us within a forbidden degree of kindred, nor privately 
without witnesses, nor to solemnize marriage at forbidden times. 

II. Prayees which may be used Daily at Diffeeent Times. 
1, A Morning Prayer. 

Thy goodness, my God, and might. 
Have brought me to this morning's light. 
Keep and preserve me every hour. 
From sorrow, sin, temptation's power. 
Grant me Thy blessing. Lord, this day. 
On all I think, or do, or say. 

2. A Night Prayer. 
When to rest I lay me down 
God's protecting love I own ; 
Hands and heart to Him I raise. 
For His gifts I give Him praise. 
The ill that I this day have done. 
Forgive me, Lord, for Thy dear Son. 
Thou, Who hast kept me through the day, 
Watch o'er me through this night, I pray. 

S. An Act of Good Intention. (Bl. Clement Hofbauer.) 
Let my object ever be 
To give glory. Lord, to Thee ; 
If I work, or if I rest, 
May God's holy name be blest. 
Grant me grace my all to give 
Unto Him by Whom I live ; 
Jesus, for Thy help I plead : 
Mary, for me intercede. 

If.. Grace before Meals. 
Bless us, Lord, and these Thy gifts, which we are about to 
receive from Thy bounty, through Jesus Christ Our Lord. Amen. 

5. Grace after Meals. 
We give Thee thanks, Lord, for these and all Thy gifts, 
which of Thy bounty we have received, and may the souls of the 
faithful, through the mercy of God, rest in peace. Amen. 



Devotions, 



6. Prayer for One*\s Parents, 

my God, I commend my parents to Thee ; protect them, and 
spare them long to me, and requite them for all the good that they 
have done to me. 



III. Prayers to be said at Different Times when the 
Church Bell is Heard. 

1, The Angelus. (Morning, noon, and evening.) 

V, The angel of the Lord declared nnto Mary. 

B. And she conceived of the Holy Ghost. Hail Mary, etc. 

V. Behold the handmaid of the Lord : 

R, Be it done unto me according to Thy word. Hail Mary, 
etc. 

V. And the Word was made flesh. 

B. And dwelt amongst us. Hail Mary, etc. 

V. Pray for us, holy Mother of God ; 

B. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ. 

Let us Pray. 

Pour forth, we beseech Thee, Lord, Thy grace into our 
hearts ; that we to whom the Incarnation of Christ Thy Son was 
made known by the message of an angel, may, by His Passion and 
cross, be brought to the glory of His resurrection ; through the 
same Christ Our Lord. Amen. 

(An indulgence of one hundred days may be gained each time that the Angelus 
is said kneeling (except on Saturday evening and on Sunday, when it is said 
standing), and a plenary indulgence, once a month, on the usual conditions, if 
it has been said daily for a whole month. Those who are reasonably prevented 
from saying the prayers kneeling, or who cannot hear the bell, are still able to 
gain the indulgence if the prayers are duly recited.) 

2. Prayer in Commemoration of Our Lord's Passion, to he said at 
three o'clock on Fridays. 

I bless Thee, Thou Lord of heaven ! 
Whose life for sinful man was given. 
Let not Thy cross and bitter pain 
Have been for me borne all in vain. 



Devotions, 63 

3. Prayer for the Souls in Purgatory, to he said when the Church 
Bell is Tolled or after the Evening Angelus, 

Thy mercy, Lord, we humbly crave 

For souls whom Thou didst die to save. 

Suffering amidst the cleansing fire. 

To see Thy face they yet aspire. 

Grant them, Lord, a swift release, 

And bring them where all pain shall cease. 

Eternal rest give untO' all the faithful departed, Lord, and 
let perpetual light shine upon them. May they rest in peace. 
Amen. 

Jf. Prayers to he Said when the Bell is Bung at Mass, 

When the priest, standing at the foot of the altar, begins the prayers of 
the Mass, make the sign of the cross, direct your intention, and commence 
your prayers. At the Gospel stand up and cross yourself on forehead, lips, 
and breast. 

5. Prayer at the Offertory, 

Accept, Lord, this sacrifice, which, in union with the priest, 
I offer to Thy divine majesty, together with all I have and all I am. 
Mercifully pardon my sins, and grant that I may find acceptance in 
Thy sight. 

6. At the Consecration, 

Kneel down, bless yourself, clasp your hands, and fixing your eyes upon 
the altar, say : 

Flesh of Christ, hail, sweet oblation, 
Sacrifice for our salvation ; 
On the cross a victim slain. 
Bread of angels, ever living. 
Health and hope to mortals giving. 

Remain upon your knees, motionless, until the bell rings again at the ele- 
vation of the chalice. Then bless yourself again, and say : 

fount of love, good Jesus, Lord, 
Cleanse us, unclean, in Thy all-cleansing blood ; 
Of which one single drop for sinners spilt. 
Can free the entire world from all its guilt. 



64 Devotions, 

7. At the Communion, 

When the bell rings, bless yourself, strike your breast, and say with the 

priest : 

Lord, I am not worthy that Thou shouldst enter under my 
roof ; say but the word, and my soul shall be healed. 

Bless yourself again here, and also when the priest gives the blessing. At 
the last Gospel do the same as when the first was read. 

IV. Devotions for Confession and Communion. 

1. The Form for Confession. 

Kneeling down in the confessional, make the sign of the cross when, the 
priest gives you his blessing ; then say the first part of the Confiteor, and 
accuse yourself of the sins you have committed since your last confession, fol- 
lowing the order of the Ten Commandments, the precepts of the Church, and 
the seven deadly sins. After having confessed all that you can remember, 
conclude with these or similar words : 

For these and all the sins of my past life I am heartily sorry, 
because I have thereby offended my Father in heaven and deserved 
His chastisements. I purpose amendment for the future, and 
humbly ask pardon of God and absolution and penance of you. 
Father. 

Listen attentively to the instructions the priest gives you, especially in 
regard to the penance he sets you. When he gives you absolution and his 
blessing, bless yourself; then go to the altar to give thanks to God for having 
granted you forgiveness of sin, and perform the penance enjoined on you. 

2. Acts of the Three Theological Virtues. 

(1). An Act of Faith. I believe that there is one God, and that 
in this one God there are three persons. That the Son of God was 
made man for us, that He died upon the cross, rose again from the 
dead and ascended into heaven. I believe that the Son of God will 
come again at the Last Day, and call all men to judgment. I believe 
this because Christ is the Son of God and therefore can neither 
deceive nor be deceived ; and because He has confirmed His teach- 
ing by many miracles. Moreover I believe whatever the Catholic 
Church by Christ's authority proposes to us to be believed ; I 
believe it because the Catholic Church is guided and defended 
against error by the Holy Spirit ; and because even down to the 
present day God corroborates by miracles the truths which the 
Catholic Church teaches. God, increase my faith. 



Devotions, 65 

(2). An Act of Hope. my God, I hope that after death Thou wilt 
admit me to everlasting happiness, and that Thou wilt give me here 
such means as are essential to the attainment of that happiness. 
I trust that Thou wilt grant me for this end the grace of the Holy 
Spirit, such temporal good things as are necessary to me, pardon of 
sin, help in time of need, and a gracious answer to my petitions. 
I hope this, because Thou, Who art almighty and all-bountiful 
and ever-faithful to Thy promises, hast promised these things 
to me, and because Jesus Christ, my Lord and Saviour, has 
merited them for me by His cruel death upon the cross. God, 
increase my hope. 

(3). An Act of Charity. My God, I love Thee with my whole 
heart, and above all things, because Thou art supreme beauty and 
perfection, because Thou art my greatest benefactor and Thy love 
for me is infinite. I will, therefore, think of Thee in all my 
actions ; I will avoid even the slightest sins ; I will give thanks 
to Thee for all Thy benefits and for all Thou givest me to suffer, 
and I will love my neighbor because he is Thy child and made 
after Thy image. God, increase my charity. 

(As often as acts of the tliree theological virtues are made, either by the use 
of this formula, or in the words our own devotion may suggest, an indulgence 
of seven years and seven quarantines may be gained ; and for daily repetition 
of these acts a plenary indulgence once a month is granted, on the usual condi- 
tions. Also a plenary indulgence at the hour of death. ) 

S. An Act of Contrition. 

God of infinite majesty, I, a sinner, have offended against 
Thee. Thou art my heavenly Father; Thou hast given Thy Son for 
me, and hast lavished innumerable benefits upon me, and yet I 
have grieved Thee. Thou art a just God ; I know that Thou dost 
leave no sin unpunished, and yet I was so ungrateful as to offend 
Thee. I am exceedingly sorry for having sinned ; I will hence- 
forth avoid sin and keep Thy commandments. Grant me Thy 
pardon, and receive me again as Thy child. 

Jf. Renewal of Baptismal Vows. 

1 thank Thee, my God, for having made me Thy child by 
holy Baptism. I desire this day to renew the covenant then made 
with Thee : I promise to renounce all the sinful pleasures of the 
w^rld, to believe and to follow the teaching of the Gospel. I hope 
for Thy grace to enable me to do this, and after death to enter 
into eternal felicity. 



66 



Devotions, 



Devotions to the Holy Ghost. 

1, Prayer to the Holy Ghost. 

To Thee, Holy Gho&t, we cry Strengthen the weakness of our 



Thou highest gift of God most 

high: 
Enlighten us with light divine. 
Keep far from us the foe 

malign. 



will. 
Help us our duty to fulfil ; 
Give solace to the troubled 

breast. 
And after death, eternal rest. 



2. Hymn to the Holy Ghost. 
Come, Creator, Spirit blest ! Eandle our senses from above. 



And in our souls take up Thy 

rest ; 
Come, with Thy grace and 

heavenly aid, 
To fill the hearts that Thou 

hast made. 

Great Paraclete ! to Thee we 

cry 
highest gift of God most 

high! 
fount of life, fire of love. 
And sweet anointing from 

above ! 

Thou in Thy sevenfold gifts art 

known ; 
The finger of God's hand we 

own ; 
The promise ofthe Father Thou, 
Who dost the tongue with 

power endow. 



And make our hearts overflow 
with love ; 

With patience firm and virtue 
high. 

The weakness of our flesh sup- 
ply. 

Far from us drive the foe we 

dread. 
And grant us Thy true peace 

instead ; 
So shall we not, with Thee for 

guide. 
Turn from the path of life aside. 

Oh, may Thy grace on us 

bestow 
The Father and the Son to 

know. 
And Thee through endless time 

confest, 
Of both the eternal Spirit blest. 



All glory while the ages run 

Be to the Father an'd the Son 

Who rose from death ; the same to Thee, 

Holy Ghost, eternally. Amen. 

(An indulgence of three hundred days may be gained each time this hymn 
iB said, and a plenary indulgence once a month. — Pius VI., 1796.) 



Devotions, 67 

VI. Special Pbayers. 

i. The Salve Begina. 

Hail, holy Queen, Mother of mercy, our life, our sweetness and 
our hope ! To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve, to 
thee do we send up our sighs, mourning and weeping in this valley 
of tears. Turn then, most gracious advocate, thine eyes of mercy 
towards us, and after this, our exile, show unto us the blessed fruit 
of thy womb, Jesus. clement, loving, sweet Virgin Mary ! 

V. Pray for us, Holy Mother of God. 

R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ. 

V. Make me worthy to praise thee, holy Virgin. 

R. Give me strength against thine enemies. 

V. Blessed be God in His saints. 

R. Amen. 

We fly to thy protection, holy Mother of God ! Despise not 
our petitions in our necessities, and deliver us from all dangers, 

ever glorious and blessed Virgin. Eeconcile us with thy Son, 
commend us to thy Son, present us to thy Son ! 

2. The Memorare. 

Eemember, most gracious Virgin Mary, that never was it 
kno^vTi that any one who fled to thy protection, implored thy help 
and sought thy intercession, was left unaided. Inspired with this 
confidence, I fly unto thee, Virgin of virgins, my Mother; to thee 

1 come ; before thee I stand, sinful and sorrowful. Mother of 
the Word Incarnate, despise not my petitions, but in thy mercy 
hear and answer me. Amen. 

(An indulgence of three hundred days may be g^ained each time the Memo- 
rare is said ; and a plenary once a month, on the usual conditions, by those 
who repeat it daily.) 

S. The Holy Rosary. 

The Creed is repeated first, then one Our Father and three 
Hail Marys, followed by Glory be to the Father, etc. Fifteen 
decades are then said, each decade consisting of one Our Father 
and ten Hail Marys, and ending with a Glory be to the Father. 

The Mysteries of the Rosary are : 

The five Joyful Mysteries, which may be said chiefly from 
Advent to Lent, or on Mondays and Thursdays. 



68 Devotions. 

(1), The Anttunciation, (2), The Visitation, (3), The Nativity 
of Our Lord, (4), The Presentation of Our Lord in the Temple, (5), 
The Finding of the Child Jesus in Jerusalem. 

The five Sorrowful Mysteries, which may be said chiefly during 
Lent, or on Tuesdays and Fridays. 

(1), The Prayer and Agony of Our Lord in the Garden, (2), The 
Scourging, (3), The Crowning with Thorns, (4), The Carrying of 
the Cross, (5), The Crucifixion. 

The five Glorious Mysteries, which may be used chiefly from 
Easter until Advent, or on Wednesdays, Saturdays, and Sundays. 

(1), The Eesurrection of Our Lord, (2), The Ascension, (3), 
The Descent of the Holy Ghost on the Apostles, (4), The Assump- 
tion of the Blessed Virgin into Heaven, (5), The Coronation of 
the Blessed Virgin Mary. 

Thus each chaplet of the Eosary consists of the Creed, six Our 
Fathers, six Glorys and fifty-three Hail Marys. 

The beads must be blessed and the indulgences attached by a 
priest who has the powers. If this be duly done the faithful can 
gain an indulgence of one hundred days for every Creed, Our 
Father, and Hail Mary, each time the Eosary is recited. 

Jf. Prayer to St. Joseph. 

Glorious Joseph, kind father and friend. 
Humbly to thee myself I commend ; 
Keep me, watch over me, help and defend. 
By virtue's path lead to the heavenly land, 
And in my last hour be thou near at hand. 

5. Prayer to Our Guardian Angel. 

Holy angel, guardian mine. 
Given me by love divine ; 
Day and night watch over me. 
From harm, from sin, let me be free. 
By a pious life I fain 
Would eternal joys attain. 



GENERAL SURVEY. 



PAUT I. 



We are on earth for the purpose of giving glory to God, and 
thereby working out our eternal salvation. We are to attain our 
end by the following means. 

We must strive to acquire the knowledge of God through faith 
in the truths which He has revealed. 

Here we speak of the knowledge of God, of revelation, of 
faith, the motives of faith, the opposite of faith, the confession 
of faith; and finally of the sign of the cross. 

An explanation is given of the twelve articles of the Apos- 
tles' Creed. 

Art. 1. The existence of God, His being. His attributes, His 
triune nature, the creation of the world and divine providence, 
angels and men, original sin; the promise of a Kedeemer, the 
expectation of a Kedeemer. 

Art. 2-7. Jesus is the Messias, the Son of God; Himself 
God and Our Lord. The Incarnation, the life of Christ. 

Art. 8. The Holy Ghost and the doctrine of grace. 

Art. 9. The Catholic Church, its institution, development, 
and divine maintenance. The supreme Head of the Church, the 
hierarchy, the notes of the Church. In the Church alone is 
salvation. Church and State. The communion of saints. 

Art. 10. Forgiveness of sins. 

Art. 11-12. Death, the particular judgment, heaven, hell, 
purgatory, the resurrection of the dead, the final judgment. 

At the close of the Apostles' Creed mention is made of the 
good things which we hope for from God. The nature of Chris- 
tian hope is considered, its advantages and what is opposed to it. 

69 



70 General Survey, 

PAET n. 

We iniist keep the commandments of God. These are: The 
two precepts of charity. 

The precept of charity towards God, which is set forth more 
fully in the first four commandments of the Decalogue. 

In His character of sovereign King God requires from us: 
In the First Commandment worship and fidelity; in the Second, 
reverence; in the Third, service; in the Fourth, respect towards 
His representatives. 

The precept of charity towards one's neighbor. By this we 
are forbidden to injure our neighbor. In the Fifth Oommand- 
ment we are forbidden to injure his life; in the Sixth, his 
innocence; in the Seventh, his property; in the Eighth, his 
reputation; in the Mnth and Tenth, his household. 

We are also commanded to help him in time of need by the 
performance of the works of mercy. 

The commandments of the Church are an amplification of 
the Third Commandment of the Decalogue. 

After the consideration of the love of God, the love of the 
world is spoken of. 

After the consideration of the love of one's neighbor, the love 
of one's friends, of one's enemies, of one's self is enlarged upon; 
after the consideration of the First Commandment, the venera- 
tion of the saints, the oath born of religion and other^vise ; under 
the ^Third Commandment of God, the obligation of labor; 
imder the first commandment of the Church, the ecclesiastical 
year; under the Fourth Commandment of God, the Christian's 
duty towards the Pope and chief ruler, and the obligations rest- 
ing on those who are in authority; under the Fifth Command- 
ment of God, the treatment of animals; and under the works 
of mercy, the right use of money, the duty of gratitude, and the 
spirit of poverty. 

The fulfilling of the commandments consists in the practice 
of good works and the exercise of virtue, as well as the abandon- 
ment of sin and vice; finally, in the avoidance of everything 
that might lead to sin, temptation to sin, and occasions of sin. 



General Survey. 71. 

The most important virtues are those which are called the 
seven capital virtues, the opposites to which are the seven deadly 
sins. 

In order to obey the commandments strictly we must make 
use of the means for attaining perfection. The general means 
are intended for all; the special means, the three evangelical 
counsels, are only for individuals. 

By walking in this way we shall enjoy happiness even on 
earth. 

The precepts which Christ gave us in the Sermon on the 
Mount, and which are called the eight beatitudes. 

In order to believe revealed truth and to keep the command- 
ments, we require the assistance of divine grace, and this we 
can obtain by the use of the means of grace. 

PAET III. 

We must make use of the means of grace. These are: The 
holy sacrifice of the Mass, the sacraments, and prayer. 

Before entering upon the subject of the sacrifice of the Mass, 
sacrifice in general and the sacrifice of the cross are considered. 
In treating of the holy sacrifice of the Mass the points ex- 
plained are : The institution, the nature, the parts, and the cere- 
monies of the Mass; the relation of the Mass to the sacrifice 
of the cross, the benefits derived from the Mass, the manner of 
offering it, devotions during Mass, the obligation of hearing 
Mass, the time and place of celebrating Mass, the vestments 
and vessels used at Mass, the color of the vestments, the language 
used in the Mass, and the musical accompaniment of the Mass. 
The duty of hearing the word of God next follows; then the 
doctrine of the sacraments in general and of each individually. 
Under the Sacrament of the Altar the institution and nature of 
the sacrament are considered, likewise the reception of the sacra- 
ments and the fruits produced thereby, the preparation before 
receiving communion and the subsequent thanksgiving, and also 
spiritual communion. Under the Sacrament of Penance the 
points considered are: The institution, nature, and necessity of 



72 General Survey, 

penance; the office of the confessor, the effects of the Sacrament 
of Penance. The worthy receptioJi of the sacrament (in its 
five parts), general confessions, the institution and excellence- 
of confession, the sin of relapse, and the doctrine of indulgences. 
Under matrimony, the institution and nature of marriage are 
treated of, the duties of married people, mixed marriages, and 
the single state. Hereupon follows the teaching concerning 
sacramentals. 

In treating of prayer an explanation is given of the nature, 
the use, the necessity, the time, the place, the object of prayer 
and of contemplation. Furthermore explanations are given of 
the most important prayers (the Lord's Prayer and prayer to 
the Mother of God) ; the principal public services morning and 
evening, processions, pilgrimages, the Way of the Cross, Ex- 
position of the Blessed Sacrament, missions. Catholic congresses, 
Passion plays, and religious associations. The latter include 
third orders, confraternities, and charitable societies. 



INTRODUCTION. 



I. FOE WHAT END ABE WE ON THIS EARTH f 

As the scholar goes to school in order that he may afterwards 
attain a certain position in life, so man is placed on this earth in 
order that he may attain to the lofty end of eternal happiness. As the 
servant serves his master and so earns his bread, so man has to serve 
God, and through his service attains happiness to some extent in 
this life, and in its fulness after death. 

We are upon this earth in order that we may glorify God, 
and so win for ourselves eternal happiness. 

The glory of God is the end of all creation. All creatures on 
the earth are created for this end, that they may manifest in 
themselves the divine perfections and God's dominion over His 
rational creatures, that is, over angels and men, and that He may be 
loved and praised by them. Even the material world, and creatures 
not possessed of reason — animals, trees, plants, stones, metals, etc., 
all praise God after their own fashion. " The Lord has made all 
things for Himself" (Prov. xvi. 4). Man is created for this end, 
that he should proclaim the majesty of God. He must do so whether 
he wills it or not. The construction of the body of man, the lofty 
powers of his soul, the rewards of the good, the punishment of the 
wicked, all proclaim the majesty of God, His omnipotence, wisdom, 
goodness, justice, etc. Even the reprobate will have to contribute 
to the glory of God (Prov. xvi. 4). In the end he will show how 
great is the holiness and justice of God. Man, from being possessed 
of reason and free will, is through these enabled in an especial way to 
give glory to God. This he does when he knows, loves, and honors 
God. Man is created chiefly for the life beyond the grave. In this 
life he is a stranger, a wanderer, and a pilgrim. " We have not here 
a lasting city, but we seek one that is to come" (Heb. xiii. 14). 
Heaven is our true country; here we are in exile. 

Hence we are not upon earth only to collect earthly treas- 
ures, to attain earthly honors, to eat and to drink, or to enjoy 
earthly pleasures. 

He who pursues ends like these behaves as foolishly as a servant 
who, instead of serving his master, devotes himself to some passing 
amusement. He stands idle in the market-place, instead of working 
in his master's vineyard. He is like a traveller who, attracted by the 
beauty of the scenery, does not pursue his journey, and so allows the 

73 



74 Introduction. 

night to overtake him. We are not made for earth; we are made to 
look upward to heaven. The trees, the plants point upward to 
heaven, as if to remind us that it is our home. 

For this reason Our Lord says: " One thing is necessary " 
(Luke X. 42), and again " Seek first the kingdom of God and 
His justice, and all other things shall he added unto you " (Matt, 
vi. 33.) 

Unhappily, too many forget their last end, and fix their hearts on 
money, influence, honor, etc. They are like the kings of that heathen 
country who, although they reigned but for a year and after that had 
to go and live on a barren island, spent all their time in luxury and 
feasting, and did not lay up any provision for the future on the 
island whither they were bound. He who does not think on his last 
end is not a pilgrim, but a tramp, and falls into the hands of the 
devil as a tramp into the hands of the police. He is like a sailor 
who knows not whither he is sailing, and so wrecks his ship. Our 
Lord compares such to the servant who sleeps, instead of watching 
for his master's coming (Matt. xxiv. 42). 

II, EOW ARE WE TO ATTAIN TO ETERNAL 
HAPPINESS f 

Eternal happiness consists in union with God, through the exer- 
cise of the intellect contemplating God and the will loving Him. 
If we wish to attain it, we must begin to draw near to it in this life. 
We must seek to know and love God. But love of God consists in 
keeping His commandments (John xiv. 23). From this it follows 
that: 

We shall attain to eternal happiness by the following means: 

1. We must strive to know God by means of faith in the 
truths He has revealed to us. 

Our Lord says : " This is eternal life, that they may know Thee, 
the only true God, and Jesus Christ, Whom Thou hast sent " (John 
xvii. 3). That is to say, the knowledge of God brings man to eternal 
happiness. 

2. We must fulfil the will of God by keeping His command- 
ments. 

Our Lord says to the rich young man : " If thou wilt enter into 
life, keep the commandments" (Matt. xix. 17). 

By means of our own strength we can neither believe nor 
keep the commandments; for this we need the grace of God. 

Even Adam and Eve in a state of innocence needed the help of 
grace. He who travels to a distant country, besides his own exer- 
tions needs money for the journey. The farmer cannot cultivate his 
land without the aid of sunshine and of rain. Man, too, has a special 
weakness by reason of original sin. This makes grace the more indis- 
pensable. The blind man needs a guide, the sick man strengthening 
food. We are like a man who through weakness has fallen to the 



Introduction, 75 

ground, and has no power, of himself, to rise. He must look arotmd 
for one to aid him. So Our Lord tells us : " Without Me you can do 
nothing" (John xv. 5). As the sun is necessary to the earth, to en- 
lighten and warm it, so is grace necessary to our soul. 

We obtain the grace of God through the means of grace in- 
stituted by Jesus Christ. 

3. We must therefore avail ourselves of the means of grace ; of 
which the chief are holy Mass, the sacraments, and prayer. 

The means of srrace are a channel through which grace is conveyed 
to our soul. Faith is the road which leads to heaven, the command- 
ments are like sign-posts by the way, the means of grace the money 
for the journey. " The way that leads to life is narrow and thorny; 
the way that leads to destruction is broad, and many are they who go 
in thereat " (Matt. vii. 13). 

It is also true that he who desires happiness must have re- 
ligion. 

Religion consists in a knowledge of God and a life corresponding 
to the will of God. Religion is not a matter of feeling ; it is a matter 
of the will and of action, and consists in following out the principles 
that God has laid down. Mere knowledge does not constitute relig- 
ion, else the devil would have religion; the service of God is neces- 
sarily included in it. We do not call a man a baseball player or 
cricketer because he knows the rules and nature of the game ; practice 
is also required. 

It is also true that he who desires to be happy must strive 
to be like to God. 

Man becomes like to God when all his thought and action resemble 
the divine thought and action. The commandments of God are a 
mirror, in which we recognize whether our actions are like or unlike 
those of God. 



III. CAN WE ATTAIN PERFECT HAPPINESS ON 
EARTH? 

1. Earthly goods, such as riches, honor, pleasure, cannot by 
themselves make ns happy, for they cannot satisfy our soul ; they 
often only make life bitter, and invariably forsake us in death. 

Earthly goods deceive us ; they are like soap-bubbles, which reflect 
all the colors of the rainbow but are really only drops of water. 
Earthly joys are like artificial fruit, beautiful to behold, but disap- 
pointing to the taste. Earthly pleasures are like drops of water; 
they do not quench the fire of the passions, but only make it burn 
more fiercely. Man can no more be happy without God than a fish 
can live out of the water. Hence St. Augustine says : " Unquiet is 
the heart of man until it rests in God," No sensible or material 
goods will nourish or satisfy the soul. Hence Our Lord says to the 
Samaritan woman : " He who drinks of this water will thirst again,** 



76 Introduction. 

Riches will no more satisfy the soul than salt water will quench 
thirst. In the days of the early empire of Rome, when riches and 
sensual pleasures abounded, suicide was most widely prevalent. 
Earthly possessions are a continual source of anxiety; he who rests 
in them is tormented by them, like a man who reposes on thorns. 
As the fresh waters of the rivers are changed into the salt waters of 
the sea, so all earthly pleasures sooner or later turn to bitterness. 
Forbidden pleasures soon bring misery after them, like the forbidden 
fruit. They are like bait that has a hook concealed within it. 
Earthly goods all forsake us when we die : " We brought nothing into 
the world, and certainly we cannot carry anything out of it " (1 Tim. 
vi. 7). When the Pope is crowned, a handful of tow is kindled, and 
while it blazes up the choir sing : " Thus passes the glory of the 
world." As the spider spins a web out of its own bowels and in a 
moment the broom sweeps it all away, so man labors for long years to 
obtain some honor, or possession, or office. Some obstacle comes in 
the way, death or sickness visits him, and all the labor is gone for 
naught. As the glow-worm shines in the night, but in the light of 
day is but an ugly insect, so the delights of earth are brilliant during 
the night of life on earth, but under the light of the Day of Judg- 
ment will show themselves vain and worthless. 

Earthly goods are given to us only that through them we 
may attain to eternal happiness. 

Every creature on earth is intended as a step to bring us 
nearer to God. As in the workshop of the painter, brushes, colors, 
oils, are all destined to serve to the completion of the picture, 
so all things in the world are intended to contribute to our 
eternal happiness in heaven. Not to use earthly things for this 
end is to lose the hope of eternal happiness; but to make them 
our end and to be dependent on them no less deprives us of the 
end for which we were created. Earthly goods are like the sur- 
geon's instruments; if they are ill-employed, they kill instead 
of curing. We must therefore use them only in so far as they 
help us towards the attainment of our last end. When they hinder 
us we must cut ourselves free from them. We must not serve them, 
they must serve us. 

2. Only the Gospel of Christ is capable of giving us a partial 
happiness on earth, for he who follows the teaching of Christ is 
certain to have peace in his soul. 

This is why Christ says to the Samaritan woman : " He that shall 
drink of the water that I shall give him, shall not thirst forever " 
(John iv. 13). And again: "He that cometh to Me, shall never 
hunger" (John vi. 35). The teaching of Christ can alone satisfy 
the heart of man. The reason of this is, that earthly sufferings do 
not render unhappy the man who follows Christ. 

3. He who follows Christ will have to endure persecution; but 
these persecutions can do him no harm. 

St. Paul tells us that " All who will live godly in Christ 
Jesus, shall suffer persecution " (2 Tim. iii. 12). 



Litroductmi. 77 

The whole life of the Christian is a carrying of the cross and a 
suffering of persecution. Christ Himself says : " The servant is not 
above his master" (Matt. x. 24). That is, the servant of Christ has 
no claim to a better lot than his Master Christ. We must expect the 
men of the world (that is, those who seek their happiness in this 
life) to regard us as erratic people and as fools, to condemn us and to 
hate us (1 Cor. iv. 3, 10; John xvii. 14; xv. 20). To be loved and 
praised by the world is to be the enemy of Christ. The principles of 
the world are in contradiction with those of Christ, and the world re- 
gards as a fool him whom Christ declares blessed (Matt. v. 3, 10). 

Yet Christ tells us : " Every one that heareth My words and 
doeth them, shall be likened to a wise man, that built his house 
upon a rock '' (Matt. vii. 24). 

He who trusts in God builds on solid ground. The patriarch 
Joseph derived advantage, not harm, from being persecuted ; the pious 
David was persecuted, first by Saul, and then by his own son Absalom. 
From his own experience he was able to say : " Many are the afflic- 
tions of the just ; but out of them all the Lord will deliver them " (Ps. 
xxxiii. 20). All the saints of Christ have been persecuted, but God 
has turned to good the evil that their enemies thought to do them. 
" If God is with us, who can be against us ? " 

4. Hence perfect happiness is impossible on earth; for no man 
can entirely avoid suffering^. 

The end of the worldling is misery as we have seen, and the just 
man is persecuted. ISlo one can escape sickness, suffering, death. The 
world is a valley of tears ; it is a big hospital, containing as many sick 
men as there are human beings. The world is a place of banishment, 
where we are far from our true country. In the world good and ill 
fortune succeed each other like sunshine and storm. Prosperity is 
the sure forerunner of adversity. In life we are on a sea, now lifted 
up to heaven, now cast down to hell. Society is always sure to be full 
of all kinds of miseries, whatever efforts may be made to improve the 
condition of mankind. Vain indeed are the hopes of the modern 
school of social democrats who dream of gradually abolishing all evil 
and misery from the world. 



PART I -FAITH, 



I. THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOD. 

The knowledge of God consists in the knowledge of His perfec- 
tions, His works, His will, and the means of grace instituted by Him. 
St. Paul bids us " increase in the knowledge of God " (Col. i. 10). 
Now we only know God through a glass in a dark manner; only in 
heaven shall we see Him face to face, and have a clear knowledge of 
His perfections (1 Cor. xiii. 12). 

1. The happiness of the angels and the saints consists in the 
knowledge of God. 

Our Lord tells us that " this is eternal life, that they may know 
Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast sent" 
(John xvii. 3). This is the food of which the archangel Raphael 
spoke, when he said to Tobias : " I use an invisible meat and drink, 
which cannot be seen by men" (Tob. xii. 19). In heaven the saints 
and angels have an immediate knowledge of God in the beatific 
vision. We on earth only know God through the medium of His 
works and of what He has revealed to us. Our knowledge, compared 
with that of the saints and angels, is like the knowledge of a country 
that one gets from maps and pictures as compared with the knowl- 
edge of one who has himself visited it. 

2. The knowledge of God is all-important, for without it there 
cannot be any happiness on earth, or a well-ordered life. 

The knowledge of God is the food of our soul. Without it the 
soul feels hungry; we become discontented. He who does not possess 
interior peace, cannot enjoy riches, health, or any of the goods of this 
life ; they all become distasteful to him. Yet few think about thi:^, food 
of the soul ; they busy themselves, as Our Lord says, with the '^ meat 
that perishes" (John vi. 27). Without the knowledge of God a man 
is like one who walks in the dark, and stumbles at every step ; he has 
no end or aim in life, no consolation in misfortune, and no hope in 
death. He cannot have any solid or lasting happiness, or any true 
contentment. Without a knowledge of God a well-ordered life is im- 
possible. Just as an untilled field produces no good fruit, so a man 
who has not the knowledge of God can produce no good works. Igno- 
rance and forgetfulness of God are the causes of most of the sins that 
men commit. Rash and false oaths, neglect of the service of God 

79 



80 Faith, 

and of the sacraments, the love of gold, the sinful indulgence of tne 
passions, are all due to wilful ignorance and forgetfulness of God. 
Thus the prophet Osee exclaims " There is no knowledge of God in 
the land. Cursing and lying and killing and theft and adultery have 
overflowed" (Osee iv. 2, 3). And St. Ignatius of Loyola cries out, 
" O God, Thou joy of my soul, if only men knew Thee, they never 
would offend Thee," and experience shows that in the jails the greater 
part of the prisoners are those who knew nothing of God. When 
Frederick of Prussia at length recognized that the want of the knowl- 
edge of God was the cause of the increase in crime, he exclaimed, 
" Then I will have religion introduced into the coimtry." This is 
why the learning and the understanding of the Catechism, which is 
nothing else than an abridgement of the Christian religion, is all- 
important. But a mere knowledge of the truths of religion is not 
sufficient; they must also be practised. 

3. We arrive at a right knowledge of God through faith in the 
truths which God has revealed. 

It is true that by means of reason and from the contemplation 
of the creatures that God has made man can arrive at a knowledge 
of God (Kom. i. 20). " The heavens show forth the glory of God" (Ps. 
xviii. 2). But our reason is so weak and prone to err, that without 
revelation it is very difficult for man to attain to a clear and correct 
knowledge of God. What strange and perverted views of the Deity we 
find among heathen nations (Cf. Wisd. ix. 16, 17). God therefore in 
His mercy comes to our aid with revelation. Through believing the 
truths that God has revealed, man attains to a clear and correct 
knowledge of God. Hence St. Anselm says, " The more I am nour- 
ished with the food of faith, the more my understanding is satisfied." 
Paith is a divine light that shines in our souls (2 Cor. iv. 6). It 
is like a watch tower, from which we can see that which cannot be 
seen from the plain below ; we learn respecting God that which cannot 
be learned by mere reason from the world around. It is a glass 
through which we perceive all the divine perfections. It is a staff 
which supports our feeble reason, and enables it to know God better. 
There are two books from which we gain a knowledge of God; the 
book of ISTature, and Holy Scripture, which is the book of revelation. 



II. DIVINE REVELATIO:Nr. 

If any one stands in a room behind a gauze curtain he perceives all 
those who are passing in the street, and they see him not. But if he 
makes himself known by speaking, the passers-bj^ are able to recog- 
nize him. Such is our relation to God; He sees us, but conceals 
Himself from our eyes. Yet He has in many ways made Himself 
known to men; to Abraham, to Moses in the burning bush, to the 
Israelites on Mount Sinai, etc. 

1. God has in His mercy in the course of ages often revealed 
Himself to men (Heb. i. 1-2). 

God has often communicated to men a knowledge of His perfec- 
tions, His decrees, and His holy will. Such revelation is called super- 



Divine Revelation, 81 

natural, as opposed to the natural revelation of Himself that He 
makes through the external world. 

2. God's revelation to man is generally made in the follow- 
ing v^ay: He speaks to individuals and orders them to communi- 
cate to their fellow-men the revelation made to them. 

Thus God spoke to Abraham, JSToe, and Moses. He sent Noe to 
preach to sinful men before the Flood, He sent Moses to the Israelites 
when they were oppressed by Pharao. Sometimes God spoke to a 
number of men who were assembled together, as when He gave the 
law to the people on Mount Sinai, or when Our Lord was baptized 
by St. John and the Holy Spirit descended like a dove, a voice being 
heard from heaven : " This is My beloved Son, in Whom I am well 
pleased." Sometimes God revealed Himself through angels, as for in- 
stance to Tobias through the archangel Kaphael. When God spoke to 
men. He took the visible form of a man or of an angel, or He spoke 
from a cloud (as on Sinai), or from a burning bush, as He did to 
Moses, or amid a bright light from heaven, as to St. Paul, or in the 
whispering of the wind, as He did to Elias, or by some interior illu- 
mination (Deut. ii. 6-8). Those to whom God revealed Himself, 
and who had to bear witness before others to the divine message, were 
called messengers from God, and often received from Him the power 
of working miracles and of prophecy, in proof of their divine mission. 
(Of. the miracles of Moses before Pharao, of Elias, the apostles, etc.) 

3. Those who were specially intrusted with the communica- 
tion to men of the divine revelation were the following: the 
patriarchs, the prophets, Jesus Christ the Son of God (Heb. i. 
1), and His apostles. 

Eevelation is to mankind in general what education is to indi- 
vidual men. Revelation corresponds to the needs of the successive 
stages of human development, to the infancy, childhood, and youth of 
mankind. The patriarchs, who had more of the nature of children, 
needed less in the way of precepts, and God dealt with them in more 
familiar fashion; the people of Israel, in whom, as in the season of 
youth, self-will and sensuality were strong, had to be trained by strict 
laws and constant correction; but when mankind had arrived at the 
period of manhood, then God sent His Son and introduced the law of 
love (1 Cor. xiii. 11; Gal, iii. 24). Of all those who declared to men 
the divine revelation, the Son of God was pre-eminently the true 
witness. He says of Himself, "For this I was born, and for this I 
came into the world, that I should bear testimony to the truth" 
(John xviii. 37). He was of all witnesses the best, because He alone 
had seen God (John i. 18). The apostles also had to declare to men 
the divine revelation. They had to bear witness of what they had seen, 
and above all of the resurrection of Jesus Christ (Acts x. 39). With 
the revelation given through Christ and His apostles, the revelation 
that was given for the instruction of all mankind was concluded. 

4. Even since the death of Our Lord and His apostles God 
has often revealed Himself to men; yet these subsequent reve- 



82 Faith. 

lations are no continiiation of the earlier revelation on which our 
faith rests. 

Instances of these subsequent revelations are the appearances of 
Our Lord to Blessed Margaret Mary, and of Our Lady at Lourdes. 
Such revelations must not be too lightly credited, as men are liable to 
be deceived; yet they must not be rejected without examination. Many 
of the saints have had such revelations, i.e., St. Francis of Assisi, 
to whom Our Lord appeared upon the cross, and St. Anthony of 
Padua, in whose arms the Child Jesus deigned to rest. These private 
revelations were more especially given to those who were striving 
after perfection, in order to encourage them to greater perfection 
still. Yet God sometimes revealed Himself to wicked men, i.e., to 
Baltassar in the handwriting on the wall (Dan. v. 5, seq.). Hence a 
private revelation given to any one is not necessarily a mark of holi- 
ness. These revelations, moreover, were no further continuation of 
the revelation intended for the instruction of the whole of mankind, 
which ended with the death of the last of the apostles ; they are rather 
a confirmation of truths already revealed. Thus Our Lady, when she 
appeared at Lourdes, proclaimed herself the "Immaculate Concep- 
tion," so confirming the dogma which Pius IX. had defined four years 
previously, and the countless miracles and cures that have taken 
place there have established the truth of the apparition. Yet it is 
always possible that the malice of the devil may introduce deceptions 
into private revelations. ISTo one is therefore bound to give to them a 
firmer belief (even though they have in general been approved by the 
Church), than he would give to the assertions of an honest and trust- 
worthy man. 

5. Eevelation was necessary because, in consequence of 
original sin, man without revelation has never had a correct 
knowledge of God and of His will ; and also because it was neces- 
sary that man should be prepared for the coming of the Re- 
deemer. 

The three Wise Men would never have found Christ if He had not 
revealed Himself to them by means of a star; so mankind would 
have lived far off from God, and would never have attained to a true 
knowledge of Him, if He had not revealed Himself to them. As the 
eye needs light to see things of sense, so human reason, which is the 
eye of the soul, needs revelation to perceive things divine (St. 
Augustine). Original sin and the indulgence of the senses had so 
dimmed human reason that it could no longer recognize God in His 
works (Wisd. ix. 16). This is proved by the history of paganism. 
The heathen worshipped countless deities, idols, beasts, and wicked 
men, and his worship was often immoral and horrible, as in the 
human sacrifices offered by him. The gods were often the patrons 
of vice. The greatest men among the heathens approved practices 
forbidden by the natural law. Thus Cicero approved of suicide, Plato 
of the exposing to death those children who were weak or de- 
formed. Their theories when good were at variance with their prac- 
tice. Socrates denounced polytheism, but before his death told his 
disciples to sacrifice a cock to Esculapius. Many of the best of the 



The Preaching of the Gospel, 83 

heathens recognized and lamented their ignorance of God. Besides, 
without a previous revelation the Saviour would have been neither 
known nor honored as He ought to have been known and honored; 
it was fitting that He should be announced beforehand, like 
a king coming to take possession of his kingdom. We ought indeed 
to be grateful to God that He has given us the light of revelation, 
just as a blind man is grateful to the physician who has restored 
his sight. Yet how many there are who wilfully shut their eyes to 
the light of revelation even now ! 

III. THE PREACHING OF THE GOSPEL. 

1. The truths revealed by God to men were, by God's command, 
proclaimed to all nations of the earth by the Catholic Church, and 
especially by means of the living word, that is, by preaching. 

The command to proclaim to all nations of the earth the 
truths revealed by God, was given to the apostles by Our Lord 
at the time of His ascension. 

Our Lord, before ascending into heaven, spoke to His apostles as 
follows: "All power is given to Me in heaven and in earth; going, 
therefore, teach ye all nations: baptizing them in the name of the 
Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: . . . and behold I 
am with you all days, even to the end of the world" (Matt, xxviii. 
18-20). For this reason the apostles and their successors have nevei 
allowed themselves to be prohibited by any earthly authority from 
preaching the Gospel (Cf. Acts v. 29). N'or has the Church ever been 
turned aside from fulfilling her mission of preaching the Gospel, by 
the opposition of the world. Even now in many countries the State 
seeks to make the Church dependent on her. It is in consequence of 
the command given by Our Lord to the apostles, that the Poi)es send 
missionaries to the heathens, and issue Papal briefs and rescripts 
to Christendom; that bishops send priests throughout their dioceses, 
and publish pastoral letters ; that parish priests instruct their people 
by sermons and Catechism. While the Catholic Church spreads the 
Word of God by means of preaching, Mahometans spread their be- 
liefs with fire and sword, and Protestants by means of the Bible. 

It is an error to suppose that Holy Scripture is the only 
means intended by almighty God to communicate to the nations 
of the earth the truths of revelation. 

It was the will of God to make use of preaching for the conversion 
of the world. Our Lord said to His apostles, " Go and teach all na- 
tions," not " Go and write to all nations." Out of the apostles only 
two wrote; all the rest preached. The apostles themselves were the 
books of the faithful (St. Augustine). St. Paul tells us that " Faith 
Cometh by hearing" (Rom. x. 17), not from mere books. Teaching 
by word of mouth corresponds to human needs ; every one prefers to 
be taught, rather than to have to hunt out the truth from books by 
study. If writings were the only means by which men could arrive 
at a knowledge of revealed truth the Christians of the first two cen- 



84 Faith, 

turies would have been at a terrible disadvantage ; so too would those 
who cannot read, as well as the great mass of mankind in the present 
day, who have neither the knowledge nor the capacity to penetrate 
the meaning of the written Word. Yet it is the will of God that " All 
men should come to a knowledge of the truth " (1 Tim. ii. 4). Holy 
Scripture soon loses its value in the eyes of those who have not the 
assurance of the living Word that it is truly of divine origin. St. 
^ugustine says : " I should not believe the Gospel unless the au- 
thority of the Church moved me to do so." 

A truth which the Church puts before us as revealed by God 
is called a truth of faith, or a dogma. 

Either a universal council (i.e., one consisting of the bishops of 
the whole world) acting under the authority of the Pope, or the Pope 
himself, has power to declare a truth to be revealed by God. Thus the 
Council of Mcsea declared the divinity of Our Lord to be an article 
of faith; and Pope Pius IX. the Immaculate Conception of the holy 
Mother of God (1854). Thereby no new doctrines were taught, but 
these truths were declared to have been truly revealed by God, and 
thenceforth they became dogmas of the faith. When a child advances 
in its knowledge of religious truth, it does not really chango its be- 
lief ; so the Church, the collected body of all the faithful, receives 
dogmas new to it, when, on the appearance of some new form of error, 
it sets forth, after careful examination, certain truths of religion in 
explicit form and imposes their acceptance on all the faithful. 
Before the definition of it by the Church it was only a " pious opin- 
ion," or one proximate to faith. Such is at the present time the 
belief in the assumption of the body of Our Lady into heaven. 

2. The Catholic Church derives from Holy Scripture and from 
Tradition the truths that God has revealed. 

Lloly Scripture and Tradition are of equal authority, and claim 
from us equal respect. Holy Scripture is the written. Tradition 
the unwritten Word of God. St. Paul exhorts the faithful to hold 
fast the traditions they have received, whether it be by word of mouth 
or by writing (2 Thess. ii. 14) . 

IV. HOLY SCRIPTURE AND TRADITION. 

1. Holy Scripture or the Bible consists of seventy-two books, 
which were written by men inspired by God, and under the 
guidance and influence of the Holy Ghost. These seventy-two 
books are recognized by the Church as " the Word of God.'' 

The Holy Ghost inspired in a very special way the writers of 
Holy Scripture ; He moved them to write, and guided and en- 
lightened them while they were writing (Cf. 2 Tim. iii. 16; Matt. 
XV. 3; Mark xii. 36). The Council of Trent and the Vatican Council 
have expressly declared that God is the Author (auctor) of Holy 
Scripture. St. Augustine says : " It is as if the Gospels were written 
down with Christ's own hand." " The writers of Holy Scripture," 
Bays St. Laurence Justinian, "were like a musical instrument on 



Holy Scripture and Tradition, 85 

which the Holy Spirit played." Yet they were not mere passive in- 
struments; each writer brings his own personal character with him 
into what he writes. They are like a number of painters, who all 
paint a building which they see in the clear daylight, quite cor- 
rectly, but yet with a great many points of difference, according to 
their respective talent and skill. Hence it follows that there are no 
errors in Scripture. We must not look to the individual words, but 
to the general sense. We must not take offence at popular expres- 
sions which are not scientifically correct, as when the motion of the 
sun, sunrise, and sunset, are alluded to. Moreover, since the Bible 
contains the Word of God, we must treat it with great reverence. 
Thus the people always stand up when the Gospel is being read at 
Mass; oaths are taken on the book of the Gospels; in Mass the 
deacon approaches the book of the Gospels with incense and lights. 
The Council of Trent imposes special penalties on those who mock 
at Holy Scripture. The Jews had the greatest reverence for the 
Scriptures and the precepts therein contained. 

The seventy-two books of Holy Scripture are divided into 
forty-five books of the Old Testament and twenty-seven of the 
!N'ew. They are moreover divided into doctrinal, historical, and 
prophetical books. 

Old Testament. The historical books comprise (1), The five books 
of Moses, which contain the early history of man, the lives of the 
patriarchs, and the history of the Jewish people up to the time of 
their entrance into the Holy Land. (2), The books of Josue and 
Judges, which relate their conquest of Palestine and their struggles 
with surrounding nations. (3), The four books of Kings, which re- 
count their history under their kings. (4), The book of Tobias, 
which gives an account of the life of Tobias and his son during the 
captivity. (5), The books of the Machabees, which relate the oppres- 
sion of the Jews under Antiochus, etc. The doctrinal books comprise 
the story of Job, the Psalms of David, the Proverbs of Solomon, and 
the books of Ecclesiastes, Wisdom, and Ecclesiasticus. The prophet- 
ical books comprise the four greater prophets, Isaias, Jeremias, Eze- 
chiel, and Daniel, and the twelve lesser prophets, Jonas, Habacuc, 
etc. 

New Testament. The historical books are the four Gospels, and 
the Acts of the Apostles. The doctrinal books are the twenty-one 
Epistles, including fourteen of St. Paul's epistles. The prophetical 
book is the Apocalypse of St. John, which tells in obscure language 
the future destinies of the Church. Most of the books of the Old Tes- 
tament were originally written in Hebrew, most of the New in Greek. 
The Latin translation of the Bible called the Vulgate is an amended 
version of the translation made by St. Jerome about a.d. 400. The 
Vulgate is declared by the Council of Trent to be an authentic ren- 
dering of the original. 

The most important books of Holy Scripture are the four 
Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles. The four Evangelists 
relate the life and teaching of Our Lord; the Acts of the 
Apostles recount the labors of St. Peter and St. Paul. 



86 Faith, 

The writers of the Four Gospels are called the four Evangelists. 
Two of them, St. Matthew and St. John, were apostles, St. Mark was 
a companion of St. Peter, and St. Luke of St. Paul on his apostolic 
journeys. St. Matthew's gospel was originally written in Hebrew, 
for the benefit of the Jews of Palestine. He shows how Jesus of 
Nazareth fulfilled the prophecies of the Old Testament, and proved 
Himself to be the true Messias. St. Mark wrote for the Christians of 
Rome and shows Christ to be the Son of God. St. Luke wrote for a 
distin^ished citizen of Rome, named Theophilus, in order to instruct 
him in the life and doctrine of Christ. We owe to St. Luke many 
details about Our Lady, and many parables not given by the other 
Evangelists. St. John wrote his gospel in his old age, to prove 
against the heretics of the time that Jesus Christ is truly God. He 
quotes chiefly those sayings of Christ from which His divinity if* 
most clearly proved. The Gospels were probably written in the orde** 
in which they stand; St. Matthew wrote about a.d. 40, St. Mark and 
St. Luke some twenty-five years later, St. John about a.d. 90. The 
four Gospels were collected into one volume in the second centux'y. 

It can be proved from internal evidence that the Gospels 
were written by disciples of Christ, and narrate what is true. 
We can also prove from the oldest copies, from translations, and 
from quotations, that no change has been made in them since 
thej were first written. The Gospels are therefore genuine, 
worthy of belief, and incorrupt. 

On reading the Gospels we recognize at once that they were the 
work of Jews. The writers introduce Hebrew expressions (Luke viii. 
14; John xvii. 12). They wrote before the destruction of Jerusalem, 
as we gather from their intimate acquaintance with the city. If they 
had written in the second century, they could not have possessed this 
knowledge. Their style shows that they were unlettered men. The 
vividness of their descriptions proves them to have witnessed the 
scenes and events they describe. The testimony of the most ancient 
Christian writers, and the consent of the churches also prove the 
genuineness of the Gospels. The truthfulness of the Evangelists 
appears in their quiet and passionless manner of writing; they do 
not conceal their own faults, and narrate what they knew would ex- 
pose them to persecution and danger of death ; they all draw the self- 
same picture of Christ, though writing in diflerent places and to 
various readers ; the apparent discrepancies disprove any sort of con- 
spiracy among them or any copying from one another. Lastly, it 
would be impossible to invent such a lofty type of character as that 
of Jesus Christ. The Gospels have not been in any way altered in 
the course of time. The earliest copies and translations agree with 
our present Bibles, e.g., the Syrian translation (called the Peshito), 
which dates from the second century, and the Latin (called the 
Itala), which dates from a.d. 370, besides numerous copies of the 
original text dating from the fourth century onwards. During the 
first two centuries the Scriptures were read every Sunday in the 
various Christian churches and were most carefully guarded. We 
also find a mass of quotations in the early Christian writers, which 
prove their text to have been identical with our own. The Old 



Holy Scripture and Tradition. 87 

Testament has always been most jealously guarded by the Jews, who 
in their reverence for it counted the very letters. There is, moreover, 
no doubt that God watched over the integrity of Holy Scripture, 
and would no more have allowed the early centuries alone to profit 
by it, than He would have created the sun for the first generations of 
men only. 

The reading of Holy Scripture is permitted to Catholics, and 
is very profitable to them; but the text used by them must have 
been authorized by the Pope, and must be provided with ex- 
planatory notes. 

In Holy Scripture we learn to know God aright ; we see His omnip- 
otence (in creation and all the wonders narrated in the Bible), His 
wisdom (in guidance of individuals and of the whole human race), 
His goodness (in the Incarnation and the sufferings of Our Lord). We 
have in the saints, and above all in Jesus Christ, glorious examples 
of virtue to incite us to the like. " The Bible," says St. EphrQm, 
" is like a trumpet that inspires courage into soldiers. It is like a 
lighthouse, which guides us to a safe haven, as we sail over the 
perilous sea of life." It also warns us against sin, shows its awful con- 
sequences, as in the story of the Fall, of the Flood, of the cities of the 
plain, of Saul, Absalom, Judas, Herod, etc. It contains all that is 
profitable to man, and a great deal more than can be found elsewhere. 
It is like an overflowing well that can never be exhausted. There 
is always something new to be found in it. But he who desires to 
understand and profit by it, must have something of the spirit with 
which the minds of its writers were full ; else he will never penetrate 
beneath the surface, or arrive at its true meaning. 

The reason why we are not permitted to read any version 
of the Bible that we choose is (1), Because the unaltered text and 
true explanation of it are only to be found in the Catholic 
Church. (2), Because the greater part of it is very difficult to 
understand. 

It is only to the Catholic Church, i.e., to the apostles and their suc- 
cessors, the bishops, that Our Lord has promised the gift of the Holy 
Spirit, and that the gates of hell shall not prevail against it. Hence 
the Holy Scripture, out of which the Catholic Church draws her 
teaching, cannot possibly be altered or corrupted. Heretics have on 
the other hand sometimes changed the meaning of particular pas- 
sages in their own favor, or have omitted whole portions if they did 
not please them. Thus Luther rejected the epistle of St. James, be- 
cause the apostle says that faith without works is dead. The diffi- 
culty of understanding Holy Scripture is a further reason for the 
Church's restrictions. How few there are who can honestly say that 
they thoroughly understand the epistles that are read at Mass — and 
these are chosen for their simple and practical character. St. Peter 
himself says (2 Pet. iii. 16) that in the epistles of St. Paul there are 
some things hard to be understood, and that the unstable would 
pervert these to their own destruction. St. Augustine says: 
" There are more things in the Bible which I cannot understand 



88 Faith. 

than those I can understand." The prophetical books are specially 
obscure. Hence the necessity of an authentic exposition of the Bible. 
Heretics often erive half a dozen different meanings to the same pas- 
sage. The Catholic Church is the authority that God has appointed 
to explain Holy Scripture; for to her the Holy Spirit has been given. 
Th© child brings the nut that has been given it to its mother to be 
cracked; so the Catholic comes to the Church for the explanation of 
the Bible. This is why only Bibles with explanatory notes are 
allowed to Catholics. 

2. The truths of divine revelation, which have not been 
written down in the pages of Holy Scripture, but have been 
transmitted by word of mouth, are called Tradition. 

The apostles received from Our Lord the command to preach, not 
to write. Their writings are concerned more with the doings than 
with the teaching of Christ, hence their instructions on points of 
doctrine are very incomplete. They themselves say that there is 
much that they have delivered to the faithful by word of mouth (2 
John 12; 1 Cor. xi. 2; John xxi. 25). Accordingly we are referred to 
Tradition. It is by Tradition that we know that Our Lord instituted 
seven sacraments. It is by Tradition that we are taught that there 
is a purgatory, that Sunday is to be kept holy, and that infants are 
to be baptized. It is Tradition which teaches us what books belong to 
Holy Scripture, etc. Tradition comes down to us from the time of 
the apostles. Just as those who follow up the course of a stream 
gradually draw near to the fountain-head, and thus discover how far 
the water flows, so we can search out the historical sources of the 
teaching of the earlier centuries of the Church, and arrive at her 
true doctrine. Every doctrine that has always been believed in by 
the universal Church, comes down to us from the apostles. If there- 
fore there is any doctrine of the Church that we do not find in Holy 
Scripture, we shall find it in the stream of Tradition, and shall be 
able to trace it up to the first ages of Christianity. 

The chief sources of Tradition are the writings of the 
Fathers, the decrees of Councils, and the Creeds and prayers of 
the Church. 

The Fathers of the Church were those who were distinguished in 
the early ages of the Church by their great learning and holiness. 
Such are St. Justin, the philosopher and zealous defender of the 
Christian religion (a.d. 166), St. Irenseus, Bishop of Lyons (a.d. 
202), St. Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage, etc. Many of these were dis- 
ciples of the apostles, and are termed apostolic Fathers, as St. Igna- 
tius, Bishop of Antioch (a.d. 107). The Doctors of the Church were 
those who in later times were distinguished for their learned writings 
and their sanctitv. There are four great Greek Doctors, Saints Atha- 
nasius, Basil, Gregory, and John Chrysostom; and iovv Latin, Saints 
Ambrose, Augustine, Jerome, and Pope Gregory, called Gregory the 
Great. In the Middle Ages there were four other great Doctors of the 
Church, St. Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, St. Bernard, Abbot 
of Clairvaux, St. Thomas Aquinas, and St. Bonaventuro. Among 
the most distincruished Doctors of later times were St. Francis of 



The Christian Faith. 89 

Sales, Bishop of Geneva, and St. Alphonsus Liguori. We shall speak 
hereafter of the decrees of Councils and of Creeds as the sources of 
Tradition. The prayers of the Church are to be found primarily in 
the Missal, but also in other books used in the administration of 
the sacraments and other rites of the Church. Thus we find in the 
Missal prayers for the dead, whence it follows that the Church 
teaches their efficacy. 

V. THE CHEISTIAN FAITH. 

1. Christian faith is the firm conviction, arrived at with the 
grace of God, that all that Jesus Christ taught on earth is true, 
as well as all that the Catholic Church teaches by the commission 
she has received from Him. 

At the Last Supper Our Lord said " This is My body," " This is 
My blood." Although the apostles had the evidence of their senses 
that what lay before them was only bread and wine, yet they believed 
that the words of Christ were true. The holiness of tne life of Christ, 
the numerous miracles that He worked, the predictions of His that 
were fulfilled, had convinced the apostles that He was the Son of 
God, and that therefore every word that He spoke was true. God 
promised Abraham many descendants, and then commanded him to 
slay his only son. Abraham obeyed, because he knew that God's 
word must come true (Heb. xi. 19; Kom. iv. 9). This was a splendid 
example of faith. St. Paul (Heb. xi. 1) calls faith " the evidence of 
things that do not appear." 

Christian faith is at the same time a matter of the under- 
standing and the will. 

Before a man believes, he inquires whether what he is asked to 
believe was really revealed by God. This inquiry is a duty, for God 
exacts of us a reasonable service (Rom. xii. 1), and warns us that 
"he who is hasty to believe is light in heart" (Ecclus. xix. 4). But 
when once a man has arrived at the conviction that the truth which 
is in question was really revealed by God, then the will muot at once 
submit to what God has laid down, even though the reason cannot 
fully grasp its meaning. If the will does not submit, faith is impos- 
sible. No man can believe unless he wills to believe. 

2. Faith is concerned with many things which we cannot per- 
ceive with our senses and cannot grasp with our understanding. 

Faith is a conviction respecting that which we see not (Heb. xi. 
1). We believe in God, though we do not see Him; we believe in 
angels though we have never seen them. We believe in the resurrec- 
tion of our bodies, though we do not understand how it can be. So, 
too, we believe in the mysteries of the Blessed Trinity, of the Incar- 
nation, and of the Blessed Sacrament of the Altar. This is why faith 
is so pleasing to God. " Blessed are they," says Our Lord to St. 
Thomas, "who have not seen but have believed " (John xx. 29). 

Faith never requires us to believe anything that is contra- 
dictory to human reason. 



90 Faith. 

The mysteries of faith are above and beyond our reason, but are 
never opposed to reason. For God has given us our reason, 
and it is the same God Who has given us the teaching of Christ and 
of the Church. He who rejects any doctrine of the Church ultimately 
finds himself involved in a contradiction. Hence Bacon truly says: 
"A little philosophy takes a man away from religion, but a sound 
knowledge of philosophy brings him back to religion." 

3. We act quite in accordance with reason when we believe, 
because we trust ourselves to God's truthfulness, and because we 
know for certain that the truths of faith are revealed to us by 
God. 

A short-sighted man believes a man with longer sight when he 
tells him that a balloon is floating in the heavens. A blind man be- 
lieves one with sound sight when he tells him that the map before 
him is a map of Europe. We believe in the existence of the cities 
of Constantinople, Pekin, and Buenos Ayres, though we may never 
have seen them. In so doing we act reasonably. But how far more 
reasonably do we act when we believe God ! Man may be mistaken, 
or may be deceiving us, whereas God cannot err and cannot deceive us. 
It is the truthfulness of God on which we rely when we make an act 
of faith. We must, however, previously be certain that the doctrine 
or fact which we are asked to believe is one that has really been re- 
vealed by God. God bears witness to Himself as the Author of the 
truths of faith by many actions that He alone can perform, such as 
miracles and prophecies. The man of good will can always find a 
sufficient reason for believing, a man of bad will an excuse for not 
believing. 

We believe the words of Christ, because He is the Son of 
God, and can neither deceive nor be deceived. Moreover He has 
established the truth of what He taught by the miracles that He 
worked. 

It would be a blasphemy to suppose that Our Lord, Who is truth 
itself, could ever have, in one single instance, deceived us. Hence 
faith gives us a greater certainty than the evidence of our senses. 
Our senses can deceive us — God cannot deceive us. Christ Himself 
appeals to the miracles He wrought, when He says, " If any one will 
not believe Me, let him believe the works " (John x. 38). 

We believe the teaching of the Church because Christ guides 
the Church to all truth through the Holy Spirit, and guards it 
against all error, and also because God, even up to the present 
day, lias confirmed the truth of the teaching of the Catholic 
Church by miracles. 

Our Lord before His ascension said to His apostles : " Behold I 
am with you all days even to the end of the world " (Matt, xxviii. 20). 
And at the Last Supper: " I will ask the Father, and He will give you 
another Paraclete, that He may remain with you forever, the Spirit 
of truth" (John xiv. 16). The Holy Spirit is therefore still in the 
midst of the Church, just as He was on the Day of Penteeost. God 



The Christian Faith, 91 

moreover still works miracles in the Catholic Church. Witness, e.g., 
the countless miracles of Lourdes, and those that take place at the 
well of St. Winifred in Wales ; and also those that must precede every 
beatification. Witness again the numerous bodies of the saints that 
have remained incorrupt for long years after their death, as those of 
St. Francis Xavier, St. Teresa, St. Elizabeth of Portugal, St. John 
of the Cross, and many others. Witness again the head of the Ven- 
erable Oliver Plunkett in the Dominican Convent at Drogheda, 
which not only remains incorrupt, but emits a most delicious fra- 
grance. Most of these bodies were buried in the earth for years, and 
were found incorrupt when their graves were opened. Witness again 
the miracle which takes place at Naples every year, when the blood 
of St. Januarius becomes liquid on being brought near the silver 
case in which the head of the saint is kept, and again solidifies as 
soon as it is removed. Faith gives us a more certain knowledge than 
that which we gain through our senses, or that which we arrive at 
by our reasoning powers. Our senses can mislead us, God cannot; 
e.g., a stick, part of which is in the water, looks bent; a sound that 
strikes against a flat building seems to come from the opposite quar- 
ter to that whence it really proceeds. Our intellect, too, can deceive 
us, weakened as it is by original sin. As we see better with a tele- 
scope than with the naked eye when the object is far away, so faith 
sees further and better than reason. We must not confuse faith with 
opinion. Faith is certain and sure, opinion is not. 

4. The Christian faith comprises all the doctrines of the 
Catholic faith. 

He who wilfully disbelieves a single doctrine of the Catholic 
Church has no true faith, for he who receives some of the words 
of Christ and rejects others, does not really believe that Jesus 
Christ is the Son of God and that He guides the Catholic 
Church. 

A faith which does not comprise all the doctrines of the Catholic 
Church is no faith at all. It is like a house without a foundation. A 
man who believes all other Catholic doctrines, but rejects the infalli- 
bility of the Pope, has no true faith. What insolence it is on the 
part of men to treat God like a dishonest dealer, some of whose goods 
they accept, and others reject ! What utter folly to think that we 
know better than God ! As a bell in which there is one little crack 
is worthless, as one false note destroys a harmony, as a grain of sand 
in the eye prevents one from seeing, so the rejection of a single 
dogma makes faith impossible. He who wilfully rejects a single 
dogma sins against the whole body of doctrine of the Catholic 
Church. Hence no heretic, if he is so through his own fault, can 
make an act of faith, even in the existence of God or the divinity of 
Jesus Christ. 

Although it is necessary to faith that all the teaching of the 
Catholic Church should be believed, yet it is not necessary to be 
acquainted with every one of her doctrines. But a Catholic 
must at the very least know that there is a God, and that God 



93 Faith, 

directs the life of men, rewards the good, and punishes the 
wicked; he must also know that there are three persons in God, 
and that the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity has become 
man, and has redeemed us on the cross. 

St. Paul tells us that " He that cometh to God must believe that 
He is, and that He is the rewarder of them that seek Him " (Heb. xi. 
6). This was the minimum required before the coming of Christ, 
and is now required of those who have never come within reach of the 
Gospel. In a country where the Gospel is preached the case is quite 
different, and no one can be admitted to the Sacraments of Baptism 
or Penance until he has been instructed in the above-mentioned 
truths. 

He who has an opportunity of being instructed must also 
learn and understand the Apostles' Creed, the commandments 
of God and of the Church, and also he must have some knowl- 
edge of the doctrines of grace, of the sacraments, and of prayer, 
as set forth in some Catechism authorized by the bishops of the 
country where he lives. 

5. Faith is a gift of Grod, since the power to believe can only be 
attained through the grace of God. 

St. Paul tells us " By grace you are saved through faith, and that 
not of yourselves. It is the gift of God" (Eph. ii. 8). And Our 
Lord says, " No man can come to Me, unless it be given to him by My 
Father" (John vi. QQ). God gives us the gift of faith in Baptism; 
hence Baptism is called "the sacrament of faith." Until the newly 
baptized child comes to the us^ rf reason, he cannot use this power 
of believing, or make an act of faith. He is like a child who is asleep, 
who has the faculty of sight, but cannot use it until he opens his 
eyes. Then he can see the objects around him under the influence of 
the light. So the child who attains to reason is able to believe the 
truths of religion under the influence of the grace of God. 

God bestows the knowledge of the truth and the gift of faith 
chiefly on those who (1), strive after it with earnestness and per- 
severance; (2), live a God-fearing life; (3), pray that they may 
find the truth. 

An earnest desire after truth is a sure means of attaining to it, 
for Our Lord has said that " Those who hunger and thirst after 
justice shall have their All" (Matt. v. 6). And again God says 
through the mouth of the prophet, " You shall find Me when you seek 
Me with your whole heart" (Jer. xxix. 13). The Roman philos- 
opher Justinus was an instance of the fulfilment of this promise, 
for God rewarded his earnest desire for truth by causing him to fall 
in with an old man on the banks of the Tiber, who instructed him in 
the truths of the Christian faith. A life in accordance with the law 
of God will also obtain the grace of faith. " If any one shall do the 
will of God, he shall know of the doctrine " (John vii. 17). To such a 
one God will give an interior light, or will send some one to instruct 



The Christian Faith. 93 

him, as He did to Cornelius (Acts x. 30 seq.). So Cardinal ISTewman 
prayed for long years for the " kindly light " which at last brought 
him to the door of the Catholic Church and the same was the case 
with countless other converts from Protestantism. Sometimes God 
in His mercy gives the gift of faith even to the enemies of the 
Church, as He did to St. Paul, but it is for the most part to those who 
are in good faith in their errors. 

When God bestows upon a man the gift of faith, He either 
employs one of the ordinary means of grace, such as preaching, 
or in some cases an extraordinary means, such as a miracle. 

The ordinary means are preaching, reading, and personal instruc- 
tion. St. Augustine was converted by the preaching of St. Ambrose 
in the Cathedral of Milan, St. Ignatius of Loyola by reading the lives 
of the saints, the Ethiopian eunuch by his conversation with St. 
Philip. Extraordinary means are those of which we find many at the 
beginning of the Christian era; such as the star that the Magi fol- 
lowed, the light that shone upon St. Paul on his journey to Damascus 
and the voice that he heard from heaven; the great cross that the 
Emperor Constantino saw in the sky, with the words " In hoc signo 
vinces;" the vision of Our Lady that Katisbonne saw in the Church 
of St, Andrea in Pome in the year 1842. So the heathen boy The- 
ophilus was converted by the roses that fell at his feet in the month 
of January, after the martyrdom of his playmate Dorothea (a.d. 308). 

Many men fail to attain to the Christian faith through 
prido, self-will, and an imwillingness to give up the indulgence 
of their passions. 

It is the lack of good will that debars many from the faith. Our 
Lord is the true light that enlighteneth every man that comes into 
the world (John i. 9). It is the will of God that all men should come 
to the truth. Men too often shut their eyes to the light, because 
they are unwilling to change their evil life ; " they love darkness rather 
than light, because their deeds are evil" (John iii. 19). Pride is 
also a fatal hindrance to faith. God loves to make use of simple 
means to bring men to the knowledge of the truth, and this the 
proud resent, just as Naaman resented Eliseus' advice to go and 
wash in the Jordan. So Christ was rejected and despised by the 
Jews, and especially by the Scribes and Pharisees, because He was 
born of poor parents and lived in a town that was held in contempt : 
" Can any good thing come out of Xazareth? " (John i. 46.) So the 
upper class at Rome were unwilling to receive the truth from a 
nation that was despised by them, and from men who were in general 
very deficient in culture or position. So, too, in the present day 
God allows His Church to be oppressed and persecuted and looked 
down upon. Hence there is no miracle at which the proud do not 
scoff. God hides the secrets of His providence from the proud, and 
more than this, He positively resists them (1 Pet. v. 5). 

6. Faith is necessary to eternal salvation. 

Faith is like the root of the tree, without which it cannot exist; 
it is the first step on the road to heaven; it is the key which opens 



94 Faith 

the treasure-house of all the virtues. How happy is the wanderer 
when he lights on the road which will carry him to his journey's end; 
how far happier is he who has been wandering in the search after 
truth when he attains to a belief in the Catholic Church; he has 
found the road to eternal life. The saints always set the greatest 
store on the possession of the faith. " I thank God unceasingly," said 
the good King Alphonsus of Castile, " not that I am a king, 
but that I am a Catholic." Without faith there is no salvation. 
Our Lord says "He that believeth not shall be condemned" (Mark 
xvi. 16). St. Paul says that "Without faith it is impossible to 
please God" (Heb. xi. 6). Faith is like a boat; as without a boat 
you cannot cross the sea, so without faith you cannot arrive at the 
port of eternal salvation. It is like the pillar of the cloud which led 
the Israelites across the desert, or like the star that guided the Wise 
Men to Christ. Without faith we can do no good works pleasing to 
God, or which will merit for us a reward in heaven. Acts of kind- 
ness, etc., done from a natural motive earn a reward in this life, but 
not in the next. They are like a building which has no founda- 
tion. Just as from the root placed in the ground arises the beau- 
tiful plant, with its leaves and flowers, so from the root of faith arises 
good works. Faith in God gives rise to a love of Him, and confidence 
in Him, and this enables us to labor and suffer for Him. Faith in 
our eternal reward encourages us in our toilsome journey through 
life. It gave Job his patience, Tobias his generosity to the poor, and 
the martyrs their constancy. Faith provides us with the means of 
resisting temptation; it is the lighthouse which enables the mariner 
to avoid the hidden rocks and quicksands. It is the shield that 
enables us to extinguish all the fiery darts of the wicked one (Eph. 
vi. 16). On the amount of our faith depends the amount that we 
possess of the other virtues, and the amount of grace that we receive 
from God. 

7. Faith alone is not sufficient for salvation. 

It must be a living faith; that is^ we must add to it good 
works and must be ready to confess it openly. 

A living faith is one which produces works pleasing to God. 
Our Lord says "Not every one who saith to Me, Lord, Lord, shall 
enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doth the will of My 
Father Who is in heaven" (Matt. vii. 21). He who has done no works 
of mercy will be condemned at the judgment (Matt. xxv. 41). Such a 
one is like the devils, who believe and disobey (Jas. ii. 19). " As the 
body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also " 
(Jas. ii. 26). Faith without works is like a tree without fruit, or like 
a lamp without oil. The foolish virgins had faith, but no works. 
Good works, such as are necessary for salvation, can only be per- 
formed by one who is in possession of sanctifying grace, and loves 
God in his heart. Hence St. Paul says, " If I should have all faith, 
80 that I could remove mountains and have not charity, I am noth- 
ing" (1 Cor. xiii. 2). We must also be ready to confess our faith. 
"With the heart we believe unto justice; and with the mouth con- 
fession is made unto salvation" (Rom. x. 10). Man consists of 
body and soul, and therefore must honor God, not only inwardly, but 



TJie Motives of Faith. 95 

also outwardly. Christ promises the kingdom of heaven only to those 
who confess Him before men (Matt. x. 32). 

VI. THE MOTIVES OF FAITH. 

1. The external motives which move ns to helieve are chiefly 
miracles and prophecy. 

It is through these that we attain to a certain knowledge that 
this or that truth of faith is really from God. 

The veracity of God is of course the ultimate motive of faith, for 
w^e make an act of faith in the truths revealed by God, because we 
know that God is true and cannot deceive or be deceived. But no 
reasonable man can make an act of faith in any truth, until he is 
quite sure that it is one of the truths revealed by God. For this 
reason the external evidences through which God establishes the 
fact that He has really spoken are for men a most important and 
necessary motive of faith. It was in great measure because the 
apostles had seen the countless miracles worked by Christ, and had 
seen the prophecies of the Jewish prophets fulfilled in Him, that 
they believed Him without doubting when He said, " This is My 
body, this is My blood." The miracle of the gift of tongues at Pen- 
tecost moved three thousand men to believe in Christianity; that of 
the healing of the lame man at the Beautiful Gate of the Temple 
moved two thousand more; the wonders wrought by the apostles in- 
duced the heathen to accept the Christian faith. How many were 
led to believe or confirmed in the faith by the fulfilment, in the 
year a.d. 70, of Our Lord's prophecy respecting the destruction of 
Jerusalem, and again by the failure of the attempts to rebuild the 
Temple in a.d. 361! Besides miracles and prophecy there are also 
other motives of faith, such as the constancy of the martyrs, the won- 
derful spread of Christianity, and its still more wonderful per- 
manency in the face of all the persecution and opposition that the 
Church has had to endure, the four attributes of the Church, etc. 

The greater number of miracles were performed in the early 
days of the Church, because they were the means God employed 
for the spread of Christianity. 

God is like a gardener who waters his plants while they are still 
tender and small. 

2. Miracles are such extraordinary works as cannot be per- 
formed by the mere powers of nature, hut are brought about by the 
intervention of a higher power. 

An extraordinary work is one that fills us with astonishment, be- 
cause we have never seen or heard of anything like it and are unable 
to find any natural explanation of it: e.g., the telegraph and the 
phonograph were extraordinary wonders at the time of their first 
invention. But their unwonted character is not sufiicient to consti- 
tute these things as miracles; a miracle must also surpass all the 
forces of nature. Thus the raising of the dead to life is not only an 



96 Faith. 

extraordinary fact, but it is one that no amount of skill or knowledge 
will enable a man to perform. Miracles are thus exceptions to the or- 
dinary course of nature ; they appear to transgress the laws of nature, 
but they do not really do so. The laws of nature still hold good, but 
they are suspended in their action by an intervening power. 

There are true and false miracles. 

The former are worked by the power of almighty God, the latter 
appear to surpass the powers of nature, but are really the effect of 
the employment of the powers of nature by evil spirits, who by reason 
of their greater knowledge and power are able to produce results 
that deceive and mislead us. Miracles are divided into miracles of 
the first class and miracles of the second class. The former are those 
which altogether surpass all the powers of nature, as the raising of 
the dead to life. Miracles of the second class are extraordinary ac- 
tions which might have been performed by the powers of nature, but 
not in the same way or in the same space of time, as the healing 
of a sick man by a word, or the sudden acquisition of the knowl- 
edge of a foreign language. 

3. Miracles are wrought by almighty God only for His own 
glory, and especially for the confirmation of true doctrine. 

Sometimes it is to show that a man is a true messenger sent 
by God; sometimes to bear witness to the holiness of one who is 
dead, or to his virtue or justice. God never works a miracle 
in confirmation of false doctrine. 

All important documents must bear the stamp or signature of the 
person sending them out, as a mark of their being genuine. God also 
has His stamp, by which He certifies that some doctrine is from Him, 
or that some messenger is sent by Him. This stamp consists in mir- 
acles. It is one that cannot be counterfeited. Our Lord Himself ap- 
peals to His miracles as a proof of His divine mission (Matt. xi. 4, 
5; John x. 37). Elias did the same (3 Kings xviii.). Miracles still 
continue to be worked in the Catholic Church in proof of the truth 
of her teaching. God also works miracles in proof of the holiness of 
the dead, often at their graves, as at that of Eliseus (4 Kings xiii. 
21), or for those who invoke them. Two miracles must be attested as 
having been worked by the intercession of a servant of God, before he 
is beatified, and others before he is canonized. Under the Jewish 
covenant the saints worked miracles chiefly during their life; under 
ihe Christian covenant they work the greater number after their 
death. God also works miracles to manifest His goodness and His 
justice, as when the water flowed in the desert to supply the thirsting 
Israelites, and when Ananias and Saphira were struck dead. God 
never works miracles in proof of false doctrine, though He sometimes 
permits wicked men to be deceived by the false miracles worked by 
the devil. Thus the devil sometimes heals the sick rapidly or sud- 
denly through his superior knowledge of the powers of nature. 

4. In working miracles God usually makes use of the interven- 
tion of man, sometimes even of wicked men. 



The Motives of Faith, 97 

Those whom God has created can only work miracles when God 
gives them the power. The saints always worked miracles in the 
name of God, or of Our Lord. Our Lord alone could work miracles 
in His own name. Bad men are sometimes employed by God as the 
instruments of the miracles by which He establishes the truth (Matt, 
vii. 22, 23). We must not be too ready to have recourse to the 
hypothesis of a miracle, if the fact supposed to be miraculous can 
be accounted for in any other way. 

5. Prophesies are clear and definite predictions of future 
events that can be known to God alone. 

Prophecy also includes a prediction of future events, which de- 
pend on the free will of man, for such events can only be foreseen 
by God Himself. The most thorough knowledge of material causes 
avails nothing. They are often just the opposite of what our pre- 
vious knowledge would have led us to expect, e.g., the denial of Our 
Lord by St. Peter (Of. Mark xiv. 31), which Our Lord predicted. 
Prophecies may be called miracles of the omniscience of God, 
as distinguished from the miracles of His omnipotence, for prophecy 
requires an acquaintance with the heart of man such as God alone 
possesses (Is. xli. 23). The oracles of the heathen correspond 
to the false miracles of which we have already spoken. They 
were mostly obscure and sometimes ambiguous, as when the oracle at 
Delphi told Croesus that if he crossed the river Halys with his army 
he would destroy a mighty kingdom, but did not say whether that 
kingdom was to be his own or that of his enemies. Many predictions 
were given by the oracles and the heathen soothsayers which were 
not true prophecies, but were guesses made from a knowledge of 
the laws of nature and from the laws that regulate the general 
course of human development. The evil spirits, through their 
superior knowledge, were often able to foretell events that men could 
not foresee, such as the approach of a storm or pestilence, or the 
death of some individual. 

6. God for the most part intrusts the prophesying of future 
events to His messengers, for the confirmation of the true faith 
or for the benefit of men. 

Thus God intrusted the prophets of the Jewish covenant with 
the prophecy of a Redeemer to come, in order to confirm the belief in 
Him, to convince those to whom He came that He was the true 
Messias and those who have lived since His coming of the truth of 
the Christian religion. He sent Noe to prophesy the Flood, in order 
to lead men to do penance. Sometimes He revealed the future to 
wicked men, as when to Baltassar He foretold his coming destruc- 
tion by the handwriting on the wall. Sometimes He employed wicked 
men as the instruments through which He foretold the future, as 
e.g., Balaam (Numb. xxiv. 1 seq.), and Caiphas, as being the high 
priest of the year (John xi. 49). But in general He only employed 
as instruments of prophecy His own faithful servants, revealing the 
future event either through a vision, or by an angel, or through some 
interior illumination. Thus the archangel Gabriel was sent to in- 
struct Daniel during the Babylonian captivity respecting the time of 



98 Fatth. 

the coining of the Messias. The prophecies of the Apocalypse were 
mostly put before St. John in the form of a vision. Such communi- 
cations were given to the prophets only from time to time. None of 
them had a permanent knowledge of future events. Thus Samuel 
did not know who was to be the future king of Israel till David was 
actually presented to him (1 Kings xvi. 6-12). 

The gift of prophecy is therefore, generally speaking, a 
proof that he who possesses it is a messenger from God. 

The fulfilment of the prophecy is, of course, necessary before we 
recognize it as a proof that he who utters it is a messenger from God. 
It must not contradict any revealed doctrine, or be inconsistent with 
the holiness of God. It must be edifying and profitable to men (1 
Cor. xiv. 3). It must be uttered with prudence and calmness, for it 
is a mark of false prophets to show no control of self. 

VII. ON THE ABSENCE AND LOSS OF FAITH. 

Faith is the road to heaven. Unhappily there are very many who 
are wanderers and strangers to the Christian faith. 

1. Those who do not possess Christian faith are either: (1) 
heretics or (2) infidels. 

1. Heretics are those who reject some one or more of the 
truths revealed by God. 

Heretics are those who hold to some of the doctrines revealed by 
God, and reject others. Those who induce others to a false belief are 
called leaders of heresy, or arch-heretics. It is always pride that leads 
them away from the truth. Among these arch-heretics was Arius, a 
priest of Alexandria, who denied the divinity of Christ, and was 
condemned at the Council of Nicsea in a.d. 325 ; Macedonius, who de- 
nied the divinity of the Holy Ghost, and was condemned in the 
Council of Constantinople a.d. 381 ; Martin Luther, who assailed the 
divine institution of the Papacy and the right of the Church to teach ; 
Henry VIIL, King of England, who threw off the authority of the Pope 
and proclaimed himself the Head of the Church in England, because 
the Pope refused to declare invalid his valid marriage with Queen 
Catherine; Dollinger, who was a professor in the University of Mu- 
nich, and was celebrated for his literary labors, but on the definition of 
the infallibility of the Pope refused to accept the dogma, and was 
excommunicated. He died in 1890 without being reconciled or giving 
any sign of repentance. Dollinger was the chief mover in the estab- 
lishment of the sect of " Old Catholics." Most of the founders of 
heresy were either bishops or priests. They are like the coiners of 
false money who put into circulation worthless metal in the place of 
the pure gold of truth. Or like dishonest traders, who mix the pure 
wine of the Gospel with some injurious compound. They are murder- 
ers of souls, for they take men away from the road that leads to 
eternal life, and tempt them into that which leads to eternal death. 
It is of them that Our Lord says " Woe to them by whom scandals 
come," and again, " Beware of false prophets, who come to you in the 



On the Absence and Loss of Faith. 99 

clothing of sheep, but inwardly they are ravening wolves " (Matt- 
vii. 5). Their object is not to spread the faith in its purity, but to 
satisfy their own evil inclinations, their pride, their sensual desires, 
or their love of money. Their religious teaching is only a cloak for 
these. They look out for the weak side of hiunan nature, as Satan 
does. Thus Luther tempted princes with the spoil of churches and 
monasteries, and priests with the bait of marriage. To the class of 
heretics belong also those schismatics who accept, or profess to accept, 
all Catholic doctrine, but will not acknowledge the supremacy of the 
Holy See. Thus the Greek Church is a schismatical Church, though 
its denial of Papal infallibility constitutes it, since the Vatican Coun- 
cil, heretical also. Heresy is one of the greatest of all sins, when it is 
not the result of invincible ignorance. St. Paul writes to the Gala- 
tians that if an angel from heaven preached to them any Gospel 
different from that they had received, he was to be anathema or ac- 
cursed (Gal. i. 8). St. Jerome says that there is no one so far re- 
moved from God as a wiLfial keretic. 

At the same time, he who lives in heresy through ignorance 
for which he is not himself to blame, is not a heretic in the sight 
of God. 

Thus those who are brought up in Protestantism, and have no 
opportunity of obtaining a sufficient instruction in the Catholic 
religion, are not heretics in the sight of God, for in them there is no 
obstinate denial or doubt of the truth. They are no more heretics 
than the man who takes the property of another unwittingly is a 
thief. 

2. Eationalists or unbelievers are those v^ho will not be- 
lieve anything imless they can either perceive it with their 
senses, or comprehend it with their understanding. 

Thus St. Thomas was an unbeliever when he refused to believe in 
the resurrection of Jesus Christ, unless he should put his finger into 
the sacred wounds of Our Lord's hands and feet, and put his hand 
into His side (John xx. 24). There are many in the present day like 
St. Thomas; they will believe nothing except what they can see with 
their eyes, or grasp with their reason ; all else, e.g., all the mysteries 
of the faith, they reject. " Unbelief," says St. John Chrysostom, " is 
like a sandy soil, that produces no fruit however much rain falls upon 
it." The unbeliever does God the same injustice that a subject would 
do to his king, if he refused to acknowledge his authority in spite of 
the clearest proofs of it. 

Unbelief springs for the most part from a bad life. 

The sun is clearly reflected in pure and clear water, but not in 
dirty water. So it is with men; a man of blameless life easily finds 
his way to the truth, but the sensual man does not perceive the things 
that are of the Spirit of God (1 Cor. ii. 14). A mirror that is dim 
reflects badly, or not at all. So the soul, which is a mirror on which 
the light falls from God, cannot receive the truths of faith if it is 
dimmed by vice. 



100 Faith. 

2. Faith is for the most part lost either: (1), By indifference 
to the doctrines of faith; (2), By wilful doubt respecting the 
truths of faith; (3), By reading books or other literature that is 
hostile to the faith; (4), By frequenting the assemblies of those 
who are hostile to the faith; (5), By neglecting the practice of 
one's religion. 

He who through culpable indifference does not trouble himself 
about the doctrines of faith, gradually loses the gift of faith. He 
is like the plant that is not watered, or the lamp that is not filled 
with oil. Such men know that they are very ignorant of their relig- 
ion, and yet they take no pains to get instructed; they are en- 
grossed with this world; they never pray or hear a sermon, and if 
they are parents, they take no pains to get their children properly 
instructed. Perhaps they fancy themselves men of enlightenment, 
and look with pitying contempt on those who are conscientious and 
earnest in the practice of their religion. The body must be nour- 
ished, else it will perish from hunger; the soul must be nourished, 
else it, too, will perish. Its nourishment is the teaching of Christ. He 
Himself says, in His conversation with the woman of Samaria, that 
the water that He would give her, i.e., His divine doctrine, should be 
to her a well of water, springing up unto life everlasting (Johniv. 14). 
And in the synagogue of Capharnaum " I am the Bread of life ; he 
that Cometh to Me shall not hunger, and he that believeth on Me shall 
never thirst" (John vi. 35). This is why the careful instruction 
of children and of converts is so all-important. When converts fall 
away, the cause very often is that they have not been well instructed 
before their reception into the Church. The Catholic must not 
suppose that he is freed from the study of the doctrines of faith, be- 
cause he has been duly instructed in his youth. The plant must be 
watered even when it is grown up; the soul of the adult needs to 
renew its acquaintance with the truths of faith by hearing sermons, 
reading pious books, etc., else it will soon lose the vigor of its faith. 
He who allows himself wilfully to doubt of any of the doctrines 
of the Church, commits a serious sin against faith, and is sure, little 
by little, to lose his faith altogether. That house is sure to fall of 
which the foundations are loosened. He who doubts any revealed 
truth seriously offends God. Sara doubted God's promise that she 
should bear a son in her old age and was reproved by God for her in- 
credulity (Gen. xviii. 10 seq.). Zacharias doubted the announce- 
ment of the angel that John Baptist should be born to him, and as 
a punishment lost for a time the power of speech (Luke i. 18 seq.). 
Yet doubts that come into our mind involve no sin, if we do not 
wilfully consent to them. If doubts come into our mind we should 
not argue with them, but should make an act of faith and pray for 
more faith. Those however, who are outside the Church, and have 
not the faith, are bound, if they doubt, to search and inquire, until 
they have found the truth ; with them doubt is no sin, so long as their 
search after truth is made in a spirit of humility, and with a sincere 
desire to arrive at truth. Faith is also destroyed by the reading of 
books hostile to the faith. In this way John Huss, who dis- 
seminated false doctrine over Bohemia, is said to have been cor- 
rupted by the works of the English heretic, Wyclif. It was the 



On the Absence and Loss of Faith, 101 

writings of Luther that chiefly contributed to the apostasy of 
Calvin and Zwingli. Julian the Apostate (a.d. 363) is said to have 
lost his faith by reading the writings of the heretic Libanius 
during his expedition to Nicomedia. In the present day the 
books against the faith are countless. Among the most mis- 
chievous are the works of Rousseau, Voltaire, Zola, Kenan, Gib- 
bon, Ingersoll, Huxley, etc. The Church, like a good mother, 
seeing how books dangerous to faith were on the increase, estab- 
lished in 1571 the Congregation of the Index, through which the 
Apostolic See forbids to Catholics a number of books, which are 
judged to be a source of danger to faith or morals. Any one who 
reads such books, prints them, or even has them in his possession 
without permission from his ecclesiastical superiors incurs the pen- 
alty of excommunication reserved to the Pope. The penalty, however, 
is not incurred by any one who reads such a book without knowing 
that it was forbidden. At one time all books had to be sanctioned 
by the bishop of the diocese, but this was afterwards limited to 
books touching on religion. By these means the Church sought 
to preserve the purity of Christian doctrine. Many, too, have lost 
their faith by habitually reading newspapers hostile to the faith. 
As the body cannot remain in health if it is fed with unwholesome 
food, so the mind becomes diseased and corrupt if a man feeds it with 
unwholesome and pernicious literature. The process may be a slow 
one, but it is like the solid rock which wears away little by little as 
the drops of water fall upon it. Bad reading is like unwholesome 
food, which ere long induces sickness and even death. Among the 
enemies of faith are the Freemasons. In Protestant coimtries 
they seem harmless enough, and many converts who have be- 
longed to the Masonic order have borne witness that they have 
never encountered anything in it which was opposed either to 
throne or altar, but the real object aimed at by the leaders of Free- 
masonry is to destroy all authority that comes from God, and all re- 
vealed religion. Their secret oath of obedience, taken as it is with- 
out any reserve, is absolutely unlawful, and the symbolism of many of 
its lodges is grossly blasphemous and insulting to Christianity. The 
idea of Freemasonry is taken from the Masonic guilds of the Middle 
Ages, the members of which employed themselves in the construction 
of cathedrals and churches. It professes to have for its object the 
construction of a spiritual temple to humanity and enlightenment, 
but Freemasons are invariably the bitter foes of Christianity and 
of the Catholic Church. Every one joining them is ipso facto 
excommxinicaiey and the Pope alone can restore him to the member- 
ship of the Church, except at the hour of death, when any priest has 
power to do so. 

3. All men who through their own fault die without Christian 
faith are, by the just judgment of God, sentenced to eternal per- 
dition. 

Unhappy indeed are those who have not faith ; " they sit in dark- 
ness and in the shadow of death" (Luke i. 79). Our Lord says, " He 
who believeth not shall be condemned" (Mark xvi. 16), and again 
"He who believeth not is condemned already" (John iii. 18). Of 



102 Faith, 

heretics St. Paul says that they are condemned by their own judg- 
ment (Tit. iii. 11). We ought to pray often for heretics and un- 
believers, that God may in His mercy bring them to the true faith. 

VIII. ON THE DUTY OF CONFESSmO OUE FAITH. 

1. God requires of us that we should make outward profession 
of our faith. 

Christ says, " So let your light shine before men, that they 
may see your good works, and glorify your Father Who is in 
heaven '' (Matt. v. 16). 

We are bound in our wo/ds and actions to let men know that we 
are Christians and Catholics. It is by the open profession of our faith 
that we help others (as we see from the above words of Our Lord), to 
know God better and to honor Him more. We also thereby lead them 
to imitate our good deeds ; for men are like sheep, which though lazy 
in themselves and unwilling to move, will follow where one of them 
leads the way. The open profession of our faith also strengthens us 
in all that is good, for " practice makes perfect." Unhappily men are 
too often cowards. For fear of being laughed at by those around 
them, or through the dread of suffering some injury in their business, 
or some disadvantage in their worldly affairs or interests, they have 
not the courage openly to profess their faith, or to defend their re- 
ligion when it is attacked; they laugh at indecent or profane stories, 
join in immodest conversation, or in talk against the Church, priests, 
and religious, eat meat on Friday in order to escape the jests of 
their companions, and miss Mass on Sunday without excuse. They 
forget that those who laugh them out of doing what is right only 
despise them in their hearts, and would respect and honor them if 
they stood firm. They forget, too, that at the Day of Judgment the 
tables will be turned, and that those who now mock at them will be 
full of terror and of shame, and those who have been loyal to their 
religion will be the objects of the envy and admiration of their perse- 
cutors, who will bitterly lament their folly and wickedness (Wisd. i. 
1-5). Among the splendid instances of those who were faithful to 
their religion and fearlessly made confession of their faith, were the 
three young men who refused to adore the golden image set up by 
Nabuchodonosor (Dan. ii.) ; the holy Tobias, who alone of all his kin- 
dred refused to go to the golden calves at Dan and Bethel, and 
went up every year to the Temple in Jerusalem (Tob. i. 5, 6) ; Elcazar, 
who preferred death to even appearing to eat swine's flesh (2 Mach. 
vi. 18 seq.) ; St. Ignatius the martyr, St. Agnes, St. Lucy, St. Mau- 
rice and the Theban legion, and countless other Christian martyrs and 
confessors. It is by way of an open profession of her faith that holy 
Church has instituted processions like those of Corpus Christi, pro- 
cessions of Our Lady, etc. 

We are only bound openly to confess our faith when out 
omission to do so would bring religion into contempt, or do some 
injury to our neighbor, or when we are in some way challenged 
to declare and make profession of our religion. 



On the Duty of Confessing our Faith, 103 

We are not bound always and on all occasions to confess our faith, 
but only when the honor due to God, or the edification due to our 
neighbor requires it. If officious people question us about our faith, 
we are not bound to answer them; we can refuse to answer, or turn 
away. But if we are questioned by some one who possesses legitimate 
authority to do so, we are bound to confess our faith, even though 
it should cost us our lives, as Our Lord did when questioned before 
Caiphas, and as thousands of the early Christians did when called 
upon to sacrifice to the idols. In such cases the words of Our Lord 
apply, " Fear not them that kill the body, and are not able to kill the 
soul" (Matt. X. 28). To fear man more than God is to bring down 
on us His anger. We also should try and avoid all wrangling discus- 
sions and controversies about religion, w^ich generally do harm 
and embitter men against the truth. Our faith is so holy a thing that 
it must be spoken of with great discretion and prudence. 

2. Our Lord has promised eternal life to him who fearlessly 
makes profession of his faith. 

For He has said " Every one that confesseth Me before men, 
him I will also confess before My Father Who is in heaven " 
(Matt. X. 32). 

St. Peter made a bold profession of his faith before his fellow 
apostles, and Our Lord made him at once the head of the apostles, 
and the foundation of His Church (Matt. xvi. 18). The three 
young men in Babylon confessed their belief in the true God, and 
God delivered them from the fiery furnace, and caused them to be 
raised to high honor. Daniel confessed his faith by disobeying the 
king's edict and continuing his prayers in tlie sight of all men, and 
God saved him from the lions. 

A great reward in heaven will be given to those who suffer 
persecution or death for the sake of their religion. 

" Blessed are they," says Our Lord, " that suffer persecution for 
justice' sake; for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are ye, 
when men shall revile you and persecute you, and shall say all manner 
of evil against you untruly, for My sake. Be glad and rejoice, for 
your reward is very great in heaven" (Matt. v. 11-13). Those who 
suffer great persecutions for the sake of their faith are called confes- 
sors; those who are put to death for their faith are called martyrs. 
A martyr goes straight to heaven at his death, without passing 
through purgatory. " We should be doing injustice to a martyr," 
says Pope Innocent III., " if we were to pray for him." A martyr 
possesses the love of God in the highest degree, since he despises life, 
the greatest of all earthly goods, for God's sake. Every martyr is a 
conqueror, and is therefore depicted with a palm in his hand, since the 
palm is the mark of victory. Yet no one is bound purposely to seek 
after persecution or a martyr's death. Any one who does so without 
an express inspiration from almighty God, is almost sure to yield to 
the persecutors. T^or is it forbidden to flee from persecution. " When 
they shall persecute you in one city," says Our Lord (Matt. x. 23), 
*' flee into another." Our Lord Himself fled before persecution (John 



104 Faith 

xi. 63-54). So did the apostles and many of the saints, e.g., St, 
Cyprian and St. Athanasius. Yet the pastors of souls must not fly 
when the good of the faithful requires their presence. " The hire- 
ling fleeth, because he is a hireling," says Our Lord, " and careth not 
for the sheep" (John x. 13). Yet they may fly if their presence is 
not required, or if it seems likely to give rise to fresh persecutions. 
The heretic who dies for his heresy is no true martyr, for St. Paul 
tells us that if we give our body to be burned, and have not charity, 
it profits us nothing (1 Cor. xiii. 3). John Huss, who was burned at 
Prague in 1415, rather than give up his heresy, was no martyr, nor 
were Cranmer, Eidley, nor Latimer, who were burned at Oxford in 
the reign of Queen Mary. A man is a true martyr who receives a 
grievous wound for the sake of the faith and afterwards dies from the 
effects of it. So, too, are those who suffer imprisonment for life for 
their faith, or who die in defence of some Christian virtue or some 
law of the Church. Thus St. John Nepomucene, who was put to 
death because he would not violate the seal of confession, and St. 
John the Baptist, whose death was the result of his defence of the 
law of purity, were true martyrs. The whole number of the martyrs 
has been estimated at sixteen millions. 

The man who denies his religion through fear or shame, 
or apostatizes from the faith, is under sentence of eternal dam- 
nation, for Christ says, " He that shall deny Me before men, 
him I will also deny before My Father Who is in heaven" (Matt. 
X. 33), and again, " He that shall be ashamed of Me and of My 
word, of him the Son of man shall be ashamed, when He cometh 
in His majesty and that of His Father and the holy angels " 
(Luke ix. 26). 

He who denies the faith denies Christ Himself. In the times of 
persecution there were many who denied their faith. Even now there 
are some who, through fear of worldly loss or of being dismissed 
from their employment, deny their religion. Others from the same 
motives, though they do not explicitly deny that they are Catholics, 
yet do so implicitly by attending and taking part in the services of a 
false religion, or by being married in a Protestant church, or by a 
merely civil marriage, or by taking Protestants for the godfathers or 
godmothers of their children, or by allowing their children to be 
brought up in a false religion. (But there is no sin in attending a 
Protestant funeral or marriage out of courtesy, so long as no part is 
taken in the service.) Others again, though they do not deny their 
religion, are ashamed of it, because in many countries it is the 
religion of the poor, or because Catholics are not allowed to believe 
what they like. Those who deny or conceal their religion out of 
human respect are only despised by non-Catholics. The Emperor 
Constantius, father of Constantino the Great, once ordered all those 
of his servants whom he knew were Christians to sacrifice to the 
false gods. Those who obeyed he dismissed from his service, those 
who refused he promoted to the places of those he sent away. He 
who apostatizes from the faith is even worse than he who denies it 
from worldly motives. Solomon, whom God had filled with divine 



TJie Sign of ihe Cross. 105 

wisdom, in his old age was persuaded by his heathen wives to apos- 
tatize from the true religion and to worship their false gods. The 
Emperor Julian the Apostate fell away from the Christian religion 
and became a cruel persecutor. In the present day it too often hap- 
pens that Catholics give up their faith through motives of worldly 
interest, or because they want to marry a Protestant, or sometimes 
because they quarrel with the priest. A vicious and sinful life often 
prepares the way for an apostasy. ]^o good man, from the time of 
Our Lord till now, has ever fallen away from the Catholic faith. 
The tree must be rotten within before it is blown down by the 
wind; the wind does not scatter the grains of corn, but the empty 
husks. He who apostatizes crucifies the Son of God afresh. He 
commits a sin almost unpardonable; he ceases to belong to the 
Church, and can no longer call God his Father, for as St. Cyprian 
says, " He cannot have God for his Father who has not the Church as 
his Mother." The Catholic must therefore keep far away from all 
occasions which could endanger his faith, for " he who loses his goods 
loses much; he who loses his life loses more; but he who loses his 
faith loses all." 

IX. THE SIGN OF THE CEOSS. 

The Catholic makes confession of his faith most especially 
bj the sign of the holy cross. 

By it he lets men know that he makes profession of belonging 
to the religion of the crucified Saviour. To Jews and Turks the cross 
is an object of hatred and contempt; Protestants, too, pay no honor 
to the holy cross, though there are indeed some of them who, in the 
present day, have learned the practice from the children of the 
Church. The sign of the cross is thus the peculiar property of 
Catholics all the world over. It is a custom so ancient that it is gen- 
erally believed to have been introduced by the apostles. The sign 
of the cross is made by touching with the outstretched fingers of the 
right hand first the forehead, then the centre of the breast, then the 
left, and finally the right shoulder, saying meanwhile the words, " In 
the name of the Father [touch forehead], and of the Son [touch 
breast], and of the Holy Ghost [touch left and right shoulders]. 
Amen." There is also another way of making the sign of the cross, 
by making three crosses with the thumb of the right hand on the 
forehead, lips, and breast successively, repeating the above words, so 
that each of the three crosses is made simultaneously with the name 
of one of the three persons of the Blessed Trinity. In making the 
sign of the cross the loft hand should be laid across the breast, and 
the sign should be made deliberately — not hurriedly, as is too often 
done. 

1. In making the sign of the cross we make profession of the 
most important of all the mysteries of our holy religion, viz., the 
doctrine of the Blessed Trinity and of the Incarnation of Our Lord 
Jesus Christ. 

By uniting all the three persons, Father, Son, and Holy 



106 Faith. 

Ghost, under one name, we make profession of our belief in the 
unity of God. 

The " name " of God indicates His authority and power, and that 
we act under His conunission (Mark xvi. 17; Acts iii. 16, 17; iv. 10). 

In making the sign of the cross, we make profession of our 
belief in the Blessed Trinity by the words ^^ In the name of the 
rather, and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost." 

In making the sign of the cross, by the very form of the cross 
which we make upon ourselves, we make profession that the Son 
of God died for us upon the cross. 

Thus we see that in the sign of the cross we have a short sum- 
mary of the whole Catholic faith. The Catholic Church holds the 
sign of the cross in great honor. It is repeated over and over again 
in holy Mass, in all the sacraments, in all blessings and consecra- 
tions ; the cross is placed on our churches, over our altars, on banners, 
on sacred vestments, and over the graves of the departed. Churches 
are built in the form of a cross. 

2. By means of the sign of the cross we obtain a blessing from 
God ; and especially by it are we protected from the assaults of the 
devil and from all dangers both to body and to soul. 

The sign of the cross is no empty ceremony, but it is of itself a 
blessing, and a prayer for a blessing from God. The sign of the cross 
chases away the devil and his temptations ; as the dog fears the whip 
with which he has been beaten, so the evil one dreads the sign of the 
cross, for it reminds him of the holy cross by which he was van- 
quished on Calvary. There was once a stag which bore between its 
antlers a tablet on which were written in golden letters the words, 
" I belong to the emperor, hurt me not." No huntsman ventured to 
shoot this stag. So whenever we make the sign of the cross, we beat 
the inscription, " I belong to Jesus Christ," and this protects us from 
our enemy, ths devil. In war no one ventures to injure those who 
wear on their arm a band of white to indicate that they are physi- 
cians, or nurses, or ministers of religion; so the devil does not dare 
attack those who are signed with the holy sign of the cross. " The 
sign of the cross," says St. John Damascene, " is a seal, at the sight 
of which the destroying angel passes on, and does us no harm." The 
brazen serpent fastened on a pole in the desert was an image of the 
cross of Christ (ISTumb. xxi. ; John iii. 14), and protected all who 
looked upon it from being bitten by the fiery serpents ; so the sign of 
the cross recalls to our minds the cross of Christ, and protects us 
from the snares of that old serpent, the devil. In the year 312, Con- 
stantine the Great, with his whole army, saw a cross of light in the 
sky, and upon it the words : " In this sign thou shalt conquer." 
These words are also true of the sign of the cross. " Even to remember 
the cross of Christ," says St. Augustine, "puts our hellish foe to 
flight, and give us strength to resist his temptations." Many of the 
saints used to make the sign of the cross whenever any evil thoughts 
assailed them. In the times of persecution the heathen gods often 



The Sign of the Cross, 107 

fell prostrate to the ground at the sign of the cross. On the occasion 
of the finding of the holy cross by St. Helena, a woman who was 
blind was restored to sight by merely touching it. The sign of the 
cross often frees men from bodily evils also. Many of the holy mar- 
tyrs, on making the sign of the cross, felt no more pain in their tor- 
ments. St. John the Divine once had a cup with a poisoned draught 
put into his hand to drink. He made the sign of the cross over it, and 
then drank it without receiving any harm from it. Something similar 
happened also to St. Benedict. In the Old Testament we find an allu- 
sion to the sign of the cross in the letter Thau, mentioned by the 
prophet Ezechiel. God sent destruction upon the inhabitants of Jeru- 
salem on account of the abominations committed there ; but an angel 
was previously commanded to mark the sign Thau upon the foreheads 
of all those who mourned and lamented on account of the sins of the 
city (Ezech. ix. 4-6). 

We should often make the sign of the cross, especially when 
we rise in the morning and when we retire to rest, before and 
after our prayers, before and after our meals, whenever we are 
tempted to sin, and when we have any important duty to per- 
form. 

We should make the sign of the cross in the morning in order 
to obtain the blessing of God on the day; in the evening to ask for 
His protection during the night; before all important undertakings, 
that they may turn out well ; before our prayers, in order that we may 
not be distracted in saying them, etc. The early Christians made con- 
tinual use of the sign of the cross. Tertullian (a.d. 240) says, " At the 
beginning and during the performance of all that we do, when we 
go in and out of the house, when we dress ourselves, when we lie down 
to rest, in fact in everything, we mark ourselves on the forehead with 
the sign of the cross." The sign of the cross should also be made dur- 
ing holy Mass; at the beginning, at the absolution which the priest 
gives at the foot of the altar, at the Gospel, at the Consecration, and 
at the priest's blessing at the end of Mass. St. Edith, the daughter 
of the King of England, often made the sign of the cross with her 
thumb upon her forehead; thirteen years after her death her thumb 
remained quite incorrupt. Each time we make the sign of the cross 
with contrite hearts, we gain an indulgence of fifty days (Pius IX., 
July 28, 1863). 

When we make the sign of the cross, we should, if possible, 
make it with holy water. 

Holy water has a special power to defend us against all attacks 
of the devil. When we make the sign of the cross with holy water, 
we gain each time an indulgence of one hundred days (Pius IX., 
March 23, 1876). Holy water is placed at the doors of our churches, 
and should be placed at the door of our rooms. We must never be 
ashamed of the sign of the cross, lest Christ be ashamed of us. The 
devil rejoices when he sees any one neglect to make the sign of the 
cross, for he knows that the cross is his destruction and a sign of vic- 
tory over his temptations. 



108 Faitn, 



X. THE APOSTLES' CEEED. 

Besides the Apostles' Creed, which is repeated at Baptism, there is 
also the Nicene Creed (composed at the Council of Nicsea, 325), 
and enlarged at the Council of Constantinople. Also the Creed of 
Pope Pius IV., which contains the teaching of the Council of Trent, 
and was published by the authority of Pope Pius IV. in 1564. Some 
additions have been made to it by the Vatican Council (1870). The 
^N'icene Creed is repeated on certain days by the priest in holy Mass, 
and the Creed of Pope Pius IV. has to be repeated by a convert 
when he is received into the Church, and also by parish priests when 
they enter on their benefices. 

1. The Apostles' Creed contains in brief all that a Catholic 
must know and believe. 

In its few words are contained all the mysteries of the faith. 
It is like the body of a child which contains the limbs of a full- 
grown man, or like a seed that contains the tree with all its branches. 
It is called in Latin the symholum, or distinguishing mark, because 
in early days the recital of it was the mark by which a man was 
recognized as a Christian. No one was admitted to be present at holy 
Mass unless he knew it by heart. It could not be divulged to any un- 
baptized person. It is called the symholum^ as being the watchword 
of the Christian warfare. 

The Apostles' Creed is so called because it originated with 
the apostles. 

The holy apostles, before they separated from one another, estab- 
lished a certain and fixed rule of their teaching, so that it might be 
the same in all the different countries where they preached. Yet it 
is only the outlines of the Apostles' Creed that date from the apostles 
themselves. Between their time and the year 600 a number of new 
clauses were added, in order to meet various heresies. Thus the 
words " Creator of heaven and earth " were added to meet the Mani- 
chean doctrine that the world was created by the principle of evil; 
the word Catholic was added to distinguish the Church from the sects 
around her, etc. The influence of St. Peter in drawing up the 
Creed appears from the fact that the principles which are developed 
in his speeches as recorded in the Acts of the Apostles, are those 
which are found in the Creed. It was required before Baptism as 
an evidence of fitness for the reception of that sacrament. 

2. The Apostles' Creed may be divided into three several 
parts. 

The first part treats of God the Pather and of creation. 

The second part treats of God the Son and of our redemp- 
tion. 

The third part treats of God the Holy Ghost and of our 
sanctification. 



The Apostles' Creed, 109 

3. The Apostles' Creed may also be divided into twelve articles. 

An article is a member belonging to the whole, as a limb belongs 
to the whole body. The articles of the Creed are so called because 
of their inseparable connection with one another. As you cannot 
take away one of the links of a chain without the chain being 
broken, so you cannot take away one of the articles of the Creed 
without faith being destroyed. There are various images in the Old 
Testament of the twelve articles of the Creed, e.g., the twelve precious 
stones on the breastplate of the high priest (Exod. xxviii. 17-21), 
and the twelve loaves of proposition (Lev. xxiv. 6). The articles 
of the Creed which we should wear on our breast, i.e., should believe 
and confess, should be like the stones in the high priest's breastplate : 
shining and spreading light around. 

The number of the articles of the Creed is the same as that 
of the apostles of Our Lord, and is intended to remind us that 
they contain the doctrine taught by the twelve apostles. 

Every Christian should know the Creed by heart. It should be 
repeated every day at our prayers, by way of renewing and strength- 
ening our faith, and of confirming the covenant we entered on with 
God at our Baptism. It is the shield of faith, by the repetition of 
which we can extinguish all the fiery darts of the most wicked one 
(Eph. vi. 16). 

FIRST ARTICLE OF THE CREED: "I BELIEVE IN GOD, 
THE FATHER ALMIGHTY." 

1. TEE EXISTENCE OF A SUPREME BEING. 

1. We can infer from the created world around us that there 
exists a supreme Being. 

We cannot see the souls of men, but we can infer their existence 
by a process of reasoning ; so it is with the existence of God. 

The heavens and the earth could not have come into exist- 
ence of themselves; nor could the heavenly bodies move through 
space by their own power. 

We infer, when we see footprints in the snow, that some one has 
passed that way; so we infer from the things around us that there 
exists a supreme Being. The planets could no more have come into ex- 
istence of themselves than a town could be built of itself. The 
astronomer Kirchner had a friend who doubted the existence of 
God, He had a globe made and placed in his study. His friend 
came to see him one day and asked where the globe came from. 
Kirchner answered that it made itself. When his friend laughed at 
such an answer, Kirchner replied, " It would be much easier for a 
little globe like that to make itself than the great one on which we 
live." A light cannot kindle itself, and after it is kindled it will go 
out in a few hours. But the heavens are lighted by the glorious light 
of the sun, which has burned for many thousands of years without 



110 Faith. 

losing any of its brightness. Look at the millions of the stars. Who 
made them all, and caused them to illumine the night ? The 
Psalmist tnily says " The heavens declare the glory of God, and the 
firmament shows forth the work of His hands" (Ps. xviii. 2). 
The great astronomer ISTewton used always to uncover and bow his 
head when the name of God was mentioned. We may also infer the 
existence of God from the creatures on the earth. Thus Job says 
" Ask now the beasts and they shall teach thee ; and the birds of the 
air, and they shall tell thee. Speak to the earth and it shall 
answer thee; and the fishes of the sea shall tell. Who is igno- 
rant tUat the hand of the Lord hath made all these things ? " (Job 
xii. 7-9.) If any one were to find a beautiful marble statue on a 
desert island, he would say without any hesitation that men had been 
there. If one were to say that the wind and rain had torn it 
from the mountain side, and given it its form, we should count him 
as a fool. A greater fool is he who asserts that this wondrous world 
had no Creator. 

The wonderful arrangement and order of the world also 
leads ns to infer that it has been framed by an Architect of sur- 
passing skill. 

If a ship sails on its way and arrives safely at its destination, 
we conclude that it had a clever pilot. To say that the stars of the 
heaven of themselves direct their course, is as foolish as it would be to 
say that a ship had started from ISTew York, sailed round the world, 
and returned safely without any one to guide it. Cicero said long 
ago, " When we contemplate the heavens, we arrive at the conviction 
that they are all guided by a Being of surpassing skill." In all that 
is upon the earth we see traces of design and of a most wise Designer 
— in the construction of the bodies of animals, and of the bodies of 
men, in the succession of the seasons, in trees and plants. The adap- 
tation of means to ends in the human eye, the ear, and the various 
parts of the body, all imply an adapting intelligence, just as the adap- 
tation of a watch to indicate the time, or the building of a house to 
shelter us, implies an intelligent constructor. As it would be impos- 
sible that the letters of the alphabet should be grouped together by 
mere chance in the order of the " Iliad," so it is impossible that the 
arrangements of the universe could have come about by chance, 
and without the knowledge and direction of a mighty intelligence. 

All the nations of the earth have an inner conviction of the 
existence of a supreme Being. 

Among all nations, even the most degraded, we find invariably the 
worship of some kind of deity. We find towns without walls, without 
a ruler, without laws, without coin, but never without some sort of 
temple, without prayer, without sacrifice. Now, universal consent is a 
mark of truth. The belief in God is an inner conviction, which may 
be said to be inborn, inasmuch as every one can arrive at it with the 
greatest ease. 

Only the fool says in his heart: there is no God (Ps. xiii. 1). 

Those who say that there is no God in spite of the glories of 



The jipostles' Creed, 111 

creation which they see around them, are those of whom Our Lord 
says that " seeing they perceive not, and hearing they do not under- 
stand" (Mark iv. 12). Such men are called atheists or infidels. 
They are invariably men who either are eaten up with pride or live 
vicious lives, or both. " He who denies the existence of God," says 
St. Augustine, " has some reason for wishing that God did not exist." 
Atheists, for the most part, use language which is at variance with 
their real convictions. Many of them are the first to cry to God for 
help when they are in some imminent danger. Their bold talk means 
very little. They are like boys who whistle in the dark to show that 
they are not afraid. God will take atheists at their word one day 
and will show Himself no loving God for them. So He took at their 
word those of the Israelites who doubted His power to give them 
victory over their enemies and possession of the Promised Land. 
They died before they entered it (ISTumb. xiv. 28-32). 

2. The existence of God is also proved from revelation. 

God has at sundry times and in divers manners spoken to men 
(Heb. i. 1), and has given them a knowledge of Himself. To Moses 
He appeared in the burning bush, and called Himself the God of 
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; to distinguish Himself from the false 
gods. He gives to Himself the name of " the self-existent One," or ^' I 
am Who am " (Exod. iii. 14). So in giving the law on Sinai He says, 
" I am the Lord your God. Thou shalt have none other gods beside 
Me" (Deut. v. 6, 7). God also worked miracles at various times in 
proof of His existence, e.g., by sending down fire from heaven to con- 
sume the sacrifice of Elias on Carmel (3 Kings xviii. 24, seq.), by 
saving Daniel from the lions at Babylon, and the three young men 
from the fiery furnace. 

2. THE DIVINE ESSENCE. 

What God is in His divine nature or essence is known to us 
partly from created things, but more clearly from His revelation 
of Himself. 

St. Paul tells us that, " The invisible things of God from the crea- 
tion of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that 
are made" (Rom. i. 20). Creation is a sort of mirror that reflects 
the divine perfections ; thus from the beauty of things created we can 
infer the greater beauty of Him Who created them (Wisd. xiii. 1). 
So again from the order that prevails in the visible world we can con- 
clude that He Who made it is a Being of surpassing wisdom, and 
from its vastness we learn the power of Him Who upholds and sup- 
ports it. Yet the knowledge thus obtained is always imperfect and 
obscure. From a beautiful picture we do not learn much about the 
character of the painter. In creatures we see God only as through a 
glass and in a dark manner (1 Cor. xiii. 12). The heathens, before 
the coming of Christ, were sunk in the grossest vices, and this dark- 
ened their intellect and rendered them still less able to arrive at a 
knowledge of God from His works (Wisd. ix. 16). In order to en- 
lighten this ignorance God revealed Himself to men, speaking to 



112 Faith, 

them by the mouth of the patriarchs and prophets, and above all by 
the mouth of His Son, Jesus Christ (Heb. i. 1, 2). It was Christ 
Who gave to men the clearest manifestation of the nature of God; 
all the rest spoke somewhat obscurely, for none of them had seen God 
face to face. 

Even since God's revelation of Himself, man is not capable 
of a thorough or complete knowledge of the nature of God; the 
reason of this is that God is infinite, and man is only finite. 

Just as we cannot inclose a boundless ocean in a little vessel, 
so we cannot take in the infinite majesty of God with our finite un- 
derstanding. " Behold, God is great, exceeding our knowledge " (Job 
xxxviii. 26). " The things that are of God no man knoweth, but 
the Spirit of God" (1 Cor. ii. 11). We can neither express in words 
nor conceive in thought what God really is. When the sage Simon- 
ides was asked by Hiero, King of Syracuse, what God is, he took first 
one, then two days to consider the question; then he requested four 
days more; then eight; and finally said to the king that the longer 
he thought about the matter, the more obscure did it become to him. 
It is easier to say what God is not than what He is. He who attempts 
to fathom the majesty of God becomes profane. It is told of Icarus 
in the old mythology, that he fastened wings to his sides with wax, 
and attempted to fly up to heaven; but when he came too near the 
sun, it melted the wax and he fell into the sea and perished. So 
it is with those who seek to fathom the nature of God; He casts 
them down into the sea of doubt and unbelief. He who gazes upon 
the sun becomes dazzled; so is it with those who seek to penetrate 
into the nature of God. Even the angels veil their faces before God 
(Ezech. i. 23). The most perfect- of them cannot comprehend His 
majesty. They are like a man who looks upon the sea from some 
high point ; he sees the sea, but he does not see the whole of it. How 
can we expect to reach heights which even the angels cannot attain 
to ? 

We can only give an imperfect and incomplete explanation 
of the nature of God, viz.: 

1. God is a self -existent Being, infinite in His perfections, 
glory, and beatitude, the Creator and Ruler of the whole world. 

When Moses asked almighty God His name, on the occasion of 
His appearing in the burning bush, God answered, " I am Who am " 
(Exod. iii. 14) i.e., " I exist of Myself, I derive My being from My- 
self." All other beings derive their existence from God, and there- 
fore in comparison of Him are as nothing. Hence David says, " My 
substance is as nothing before Thee" (Ps. xxxviii. 6). God also pos- 
sesses the highest perfection. We see how some beings upon the earth 
are more perfect than others. Some things have only existence with- 
out life, as stones and metals ; others have life, but without sensation, 
as trees and plants; others have sensation and movement as well, 
as birds and beasts; man has a spiritual life, with intellect and free 
will. Above man there are countless numbers of pure spirits, each 
with a special perfection of its own, and each increasing in virtue as 



The Apostles' Creed, - 115 

it ascends towards the throne of God. But they can never arrive at 
infinite perfection, since the most perfect among them can always at- 
tain to some higher excellence. Hence we must believe in a Being 
of infinite perfection, from Whom all other beings derive their vir- 
tues, Who possesses in Himself, and Who is infinitely exalted beyond, 
all existing or possible perfections that can be found in all other 
beings than Himself. ISTothing greater than God can either exist or 
even be thought of. God is also infinite in glory and beauty. For if 
on the earth there exist so many beautiful things, how far greater 
must be the beauty and glory of God, since it is He Who gave them 
all their beauty. He could not have given it unless He already 
possessed it. He is like the boundless ocean, and the beauty of all 
created things is like a series of drops taken from the ocean. God 
is also infinite in His supreme happiness or beatitude. He lives in 
endless and infinite joy; no creature can interfere with the perfection 
of His happiness. None can either increase or diminish it (1 Tim. vi. 
15). As the sun needs no light from other bodies, because it is itself 
the light, so God needs nothing from others, because He is Himself in 
possession of all good. We can only give Him what we have already 
received from Him. God is the Creator of the whole world, of 
heaven, earth, and sea. He is also the King and Lord of all, and has 
made all things outside of Himself subject to certain fixed laws. The 
earth is subject to fixed laws. It goes round the sun in three hundred 
and sixty-five and a quarter days, and revolves on its own axis in 
twenty-four hours. All the heavenly bodies move according to fixed 
laws, so that we can foretell eclipses of the sun and moon, etc.; 
there are laws which regulate all the material things on the face of 
the earth. Plants, trees, and animals have their growth and develop- 
ment governed by stated laws. The actions of reasonable beings 
are also governed by laws, which, however, by reason of their free 
will, they are able to disobey. The penalties for transgression are 
laid down by almighty God. God is the King of kings, the eternal 
King (Tob. xiii. 6). The majesty of the greatest of earthly kings 
is but a feeble and faint reflection of the majesty of God. Hence 
we are bound to obey Him, because He is our King and He will have 
all subject to Him, either willingly in this life, or against their will 
to their eternal misery. 

2. We cannot see God, because He is a spirit, i.e., a being VTlth- 
out body, immortal, possessed of intellect and free will. 

Our Lord says : " God is a spirit, and they that adore Him must 
adore Him in spirit and in truth " (John iv. 24). It is because God 
is a spirit that the Jews were strictly forbidden to make any image of 
Him (Exod. xx. 4). God cannot be seen by man; there is a veil be- 
tween us and God. We cannot see the stars during the day, but only 
when darkness comes on. So we cannot see God during the day of our 
life on earth, but only when the darkness of death comes over us. 
In this life God is a hidden God (Is. xlv. 15). He inhabits the in- 
accessible light (1 Tim. vi. 16). 

Yet God has often assumed visible forms. 
Thus He appeared to Abraham as a traveller, at the baptism of 



114 Faith. 

Our Lord under the form of a dove, and in the shape of tongues of 
fire at Pentecost. But the external form under which God appeared 
was not God Himself. In the same way we often read of the eyes, 
ears, etc., of God; but this is only to impress upon us the fact that 
God sees us, hears us, etc. 

3. There is one God, and one only. 

The most perfect being in the world must be only one. The tall- 
est tree in the wood is but one. To say that there are more Gods than 
one is like saying that there can be more than one soul in a human 
body, or more than one captain on a ship. Even the pagan Greeks 
and Romans honored one god as supreme among the rest. The plu- 
rality of gods probably arose from the plurality of the forces of 
nature (such as thunder, lightning, fire, etc.), which filled the be- 
holders with fear, and caused them to adore these forces as gods. Or 
it may have arisen from the deification of heroes, or from the power 
of the evil spirits which, having attracted notice, caused them to be 
worshipped as gods. 

3. THE DIVINE ATTRIBUTES. 

"We ascribe to God various attributes, because the unity 
of the divine perfection is reflected in different ways in crea- 
tures. 

The sun is sometimes red, sometimes yellow, or a palish white. 
It is the mists around the earth that cause the variety in it as it is 
seen by us. The attributes of God are therefore various manifesta- 
tions of God's one and indivisible perfection or essence. In God they 
are all one and the same ; His goodness is the same as His justice, His 
wisdom as His power, and His power as His eternity, etc. The divine 
attributes are also identical with God Himself ; God is wisdom, power, 
eternity, etc. God is' a Being of the most perfect and absolute sim- 
plicity; there is no sort of multiplicity or obscurity in Him. There 
is no sort of division between His attributes; it is from our under- 
standing that the distinction between them arises. In created things 
it is quite different; they possess attributes which are really distinct 
from each other. 

The attributes of God may be divided into those which be- 
long to God's essence, those that belong to His understanding, 
and those that belong to His will. 

The attributes of the divine essence are omnipresence, eternity, 
immutability; those that belong to His understanding are omnis- 
cience, perfect wisdom, etc.; those that belong to His will are om- 
nipotence, goodness, holiness, justice, truth, and faithfulness. 

1. God is eternal, i.e., alwayi was, is, and ever will be. 

God's words to Moses "I am Who am" (Exod. iii. 14), express 
His eternity. There never was a time when God did not exist; He 
never began to exist. He existed before the world, as a builder must 
exist before the house that he builds, and the watchmaker before the 



''77^6 Apostles' Creed, 115 

watch that he fashions. God can never cease to live, as men do. 
Hence He is called the living God (Matt. xvi. 16) and immortal 
(1 Tim. i. 17). He existed before all time, and He will exist to all 
eternity. With Him there is no past or future; all is present with 
Him. The whole history of the world is and has ever been in His 
sight; there is for Him no succession of events; for Him there is 
no time. " One day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a 
thousand years as one day" (2 Pet. iii. 8). Millions of ages are aa 
nothing compared with eternity. If a bird were to carry away from 
the ocean one drop of water every thousand years, the time would 
come when the ocean would be dry ; but that immense period of time, 
which seems to us inexhaustible, is less than the shortest moment 
compared with the eternity of God's existence. "Dost thou desire 
eternal joy," says St. Augustine, " thou must be faithful to Him Who 
is the Eternal." 

2. God is omnipresent, i.e., He is in every place. 

After Jacob had seen, in the open country, the ladder reaching 
up to heaven, he exclaimed, " God is in this place, and I knew it not " 
(Gen. xxviii. 16). The same words are true of every place. God 
is not only present everywhere with His power, but He Himself fills 
and penetrates all space. " Do not I fill heaven and earth, saith the 
Lord?" (Jer. xxiii. 24.) 

1. God is everywhere present, because all created things 
exist in God. 

All creatures exist in God, as thought exists in our minds. As 
mind is of more extent than thought, so God is of more extent than 
the world and all it contains. As mind penetrates thought, so 
God penetrates the world. " In Him we live, and move, and exist " 
(Acts xvii. 28). God is at the same time quite distinct from crea- 
tures and from the whole world. 

2. God is not circumscribed by any place, nor by the whole 
of creation, because He has no limits, either actual or possible. 

In his prayer at the dedication of the Temple Solomon said : " If 
heaven and the heaven of heavens cannot contain Thee, how much 
less this house that I have built" (3 Kings viii. 27). The infinite 
cannot be contained in measurable space. Only bodies are con- 
tained in space. Spirits indeed are not contained in space, but they 
cannot be in more than one place at the same time. " God is every- 
where," says St. Bernard, " and yet nowhere. He is near us and yet is 
far away. All creation is in Him, and yet it is as if He were not 
in it." 

3. Yet God is of more extent than space, and therefore can 
be in every place at the same time. 

Though God is of more extent than all space, and His presence 
extends from earth to heaven and far beyond. He is not scattered 
over the universe, partly on earth and partly in heaven, but He is 
wholly everywhere and wholly in each separate place; wholly in 
heaven and wholly on earth. He fills heaven and earth. So the soul 



116 Faith. 

of man fills his entire body, but yet it is wholly in every separate por- 
tion of His body. 

4. God is present in a special manner in heaven, in the 
Blessed Sacrament, and in the souls of the just. 

God is present in heaven to the gaze of the angels and saints. 
He is present as the God-man in the Blessed Sacrament; He is pres- 
ent in the souls of men through the Holy Ghost Who is given to them. 
A king is present in his whole palace, but is specially present in the 
chamber where he sits on his throne, and gives audiences to his 
subjects. 

5. There is no place where God is not. 

" The eyes of the Lord in every place behold the good and the 
evil" (Prov. xv. 3). We sometimes see in churches a large eye 
painted over the altar, to remind us that God is present every- 
where. "No one can hide himself from God" (Jer. xxiii. 23, 
24). Hence no one can escape from God (Ps. cxxxviii. 7, 8). Jonas 
made the attempt, but with very poor success. Hence learn to avoid 
every sin. See with what unspeakable shame a man is filled, if he is 
detected by one of his fellow-men in a despicable action. Yet we are 
not ashamed to practise the most disgraceful vices in the presence 
of God (St. Augustine). 

6. "We ought therefore continually to bear in mind that God 
is always present with us. 

Think, wherever you are, that God is near you. As there is no 
moment of time when we are not enjoying some benefit from the 
hand of God, so there ought to be no moment of time when we have 
not God in our thoughts. " He who always has God in his thoughts," 
says St. Ephrem, " will become like an angel on the earth." 

The continual remembrance of the presence of God is very 
profitable to us. It has great power to deter us from sin, and to 
keep us in the grace of God; it incites us to good works and 
makes us intrepid in His service. 

The remembrance of the presence of God gives strength in time 
of temptation and holds us back from sin. Look at Joseph in Egypt. 
A soldier fights more bravely in the presence of his king. The re- 
membrance of the presence of God is also the best means of remain- 
ing in the grace of God. It is like Ariadne's clew, by means of which 
we, like Theseus, can find the way through the labyrinth of our life 
on earth, and remain unscathed by the Minotaur of hell. The re- 
membrance of the presence of God increases our zeal in God's serv- 
ice and leads us on to the practice of all the virtues ; it makes us more 
careful in the performance of all our duties. The nearer the water is 
to the spring the purer it is ; the nearer one is to the fire the greater 
the warmth; the closer we keep to God, the greater our perfection. 
When the tree is closely united to the root, it brings forth plenteous 
fruit. The Christian brings forth good fruit to eternal life if he is 
closely united to God. The thought of God also renders us fearless. 



The Apostles' Creed, 117 

When the Empress Eudoxia threatened St. John Chrysostom with 
banishment, he answered " You will not frighten me, unless you are 
able to send me to some place where God is not." David says to God : 
" Though I walk in the midst of the shadow of death, I will fear no 
evil, for Thou art with me " (Ps. xxii. 4). If a timid man has a com- 
panion with him, his fear disappears ; so we shall not fear if God, the 
all-powerful God, is with us. 

3. God is immutable, i.e., He ever remains the same. 

God never changes; He never becomes better or worse; He never 
breaks His word (Numb, xxiii. 19). Creation made no change in 
God; from all eternity He had decreed the creation of the universe. 
God changes His works, but not His eternal decrees. By the Incar- 
nation humanity was changed, but the Godhead underwent no change, 
just as the sun is in no way changed when it hides itself behind a 
cloud. Our thoughts are not changed when they clothe themselves in 
words ; so the divinity was not changed when it clothed itself in the 
nature of man. God does not change when He punishes the 
sinner. When the heart of man is in friendship with God, God 
shows Himself to him as a God of infinite love and mercy; when 
the heart is estranged from Him, the sinner sees in the unchange- 
able God an angry and avenging judge. When the eye is sound, 
the light is pleasant to it; but if it is diseased, light causes it 
pain: it is not the light that is changed, but the eye that looks 
upon it. When an angry man looks in the glass he sees a differ- 
ent reflection from that which he saw when he was cheerful and 
in good-humor; it is not the glass that has changed, but the 
man. When the sun shines through colored glass, its rays take 
the color of the glass; the sun does not change, but the light is 
changed by the medium through which it passes. So when God re- 
wards, it is not God Who changes, but man, who performs different 
and better actions, thereby meriting the grace of God. When in 
Scripture we read that God repented of having made man, that God 
is angry with the wicked, the phrases used are accommodated to our 
imperfect comprehension. 

4. God is omniscient, i.e., He knows all things, the past, the 
present, and the future, and also our inmost thoughts (Jer. xvii. 
10). 

God knew that Adam and Eve had eaten of the forbidden fruit. 
Our Lord foreknew St. Peter's denial, the destruction of Jerusalem, 
etc. He knew the thoughts of Simon the Pharisee, and that he was 
angry at Our Lord showing such kindness to Magdalen the sinner. 
God sees as in a glass all men, and their every action (Ps. xxxii. 13). 
" He that planted the ear shall He not hear ? He that made the eye 
shall He not see ? " (Ps. xciii. 9.) God also foresees evil, but man is 
not thereby constrained to do evil. It is just as if we see from a dis- 
tance a man who is committing some crime. God sees the deed be- 
cause the man does it; the man does not do it because God sees it. 
When some past action is present to our thoughts, it did not happen 
because it is in our thoughts ; so when God foresees some future ac- 
fton, it does not happen because God has foreseen it. but He has fore- 



118 Faith, 

seen it because the man is going to commit it — the man is not com- 
pelled to commit because God has foreseen it. When God foresees 
that some man will be lost forever, God's foreknowledge is not the 
cause of the man's damnation. The physician foresees the approach- 
ing death of his patient, but his knowledge is not the cause of the 
man's death. The learned Franciscan Duns Scotus, once heard a 
farmer uttering terrible curses and begged him not to damn his soul 
so thoughtlessly. The farmer answered : " God knows everything. 
He knows whether I shall go to heaven or to hell. If He knows that 
I shall go to heaven, why to heaven 1 shall go; if He knows that I 
shall go to hell, I shall go to Lell. What, 1hen, does it matter what 
I do or say ? " The priest answered, " In that case why plough your 
fields ? God knows whether they will bear a good crop or not. If He 
knows that they will bear a good harvest, the harvest will be good, 
whether you plough the land or not. If He knows that they will be 
unfruitful, why unfruitful they will be. Why then should you waste 
your time in ploughing ? " Then the farmer understood that it is 
not the omniscience of God, but the free action of man, that deter- 
mines both our temporal and our eternal happiness or misery. 

God also knows what would have happened under certain 
given circumstances; this is the reason why He sends us trials, 
in order to prevent greater evils that otherwise would have hap- 
pened to us. 

Thus Our Lord knew that the inhabitants of Tyre and Sidon 
would have done penance if such wonders had been worked among 
them as He worked in Corozain and Bethsaida. God foresees that 
some of the just will be led astray by the seductions of the world, 
and sometimes in His mercy takes them at an early age to Him- 
self. He foresees that some will be ruined by riches or by prosperity, 
and therefore brings them to poverty and to earthly misfortune. 
This ought to make us bear our troubles with patience. The trials 
of the just are an opportunity offered them to advance in virtue. 

God, W^ho knows all things, will one day bring all hidden 
things to light. 

Our Lord says, " There is nothing hidden that shall not be made 
manifest; or secret that shall not be known and come abroad " (Luke 
viii. 17). God will, in the Last Day, disclose and make known our 
whole life. As the morning sun shows all things in their true light, 
so Christ, the Sun of justice, will at the Dav of Judgment reveal all 
our actions in their true light. All prayers, alms, fasts, penances, 
that are done according to His will, will be made manifest to the 
whole world. Nothing is so small as to escape notice at the Las*" 
Bay. 

We should think on God's omniscience, especially when we 
are tempted, that we may pass through our temptations un- 
scathed. 

A little boy who was in a strange house saw there a basket full 
of beautiful apples. As he could see no one in the room, he was much 



The Apostles' Creed, 119 

tempted to help himself to some. But the thought came to him of 
God's omniscience. "No/' he said, "I must not take them, for God 
sees me." At that moment a man who was hidden from him by a 
curtain, called out to him, "You may take as many apples as you 
like." What a blessing it was for him that he had not taken them 
without permission. If we know that some one is watching us we are 
very careful what we do ; if we remember that God sees us, we shall be 
still more careful. Job took refuge in God's knowledge of his inno- 
cence, when he was mocked at by his friends; so did Susanna when 
falsely accused (Job xvi. 16; Dan. xiii. 42). 

5. God is supremely wise, i.e., He knows how to direct every- 
thing for the best in order to carry out His designs. 

The design at which God aims is nothing else than His own 
glory, and the good of His creatures. If the farmer wishes for a 
good harvest, he ploughs his field, manures it, sows good seed, etc. 
Such a farmer is a wise man, because he chooses the means best quali- 
fied to attain his end. God acts in an exactly similar way. He pre- 
pared the world for the coming of the Redeemer by the call of Abra- 
ham, the sending of the prophets, etc. The wisdom of God shows 
itself in the life of individuals, e.g., of Joseph in Egypt, of Moses, of 
St. Paul, and also in the history of nations and kingdoms. (Cf. 
Rom. xi. 33.) 

1. The wisdom of God shows itself especially in the way in 
which He brings good out of evil. 

The life of the patriarch Joseph is an excellent example of this. 
God's ways are not as our ways, or His thoughts as our thoughts. 
Man proposes and God disposes. A man inexperienced in war would 
be puzzled by the orders issued by the general, and would not be able 
to understand how they all could tend to insure victory. We shall 
understand God's ways in heaven, but we cannot understand them 
here. A child saw how the thorns tore away little pieces from the 
fleece of a sheep and wanted to remove the thorns. Presently the 
child saw how the singing-birds collected the bits of wool to make 
their nests, and no longer wished to remove the thorns. Many men 
are like this child. 

2. The wisdom of God is also displayed in this, that God 
makes use of the most unlikely means for His own honor. 

St. Paul says: "The weak things of this world God has chosen 
to confound the strong" (1 Cor. i. 27). God chose the small and 
despised land of Palestine as the cradle of Christianity; He chose a 
poor maiden to be the Mother of God, and a poor carpenter to be 
His foster-father. He chose poor, ignorant fishermen to preach the 
Gospel and spread it over all the earth. He often uses the most im- 
probable means in helping His friends. St. Felix of Nola, when 
flying from his persecutors, took refuge in a hole in a rock. A spider 
came and spun its web at the mouth of the cave, and his pursuers, on 
seeing this, concluded that he could not be inside. A poor woman 
was summoned to pay some money which had already been paid by 
her husband, who was dead. She searched everywhere for the receipt, 



130 Faith, 

but in vain. The very morning when she had to appear before the 
court a cockchafer flew in at the window, and behind a press. One 
of the children wanted to get it, so the mother moved the press a little 
to reach it, and from behind the press the long-sought receipt fell 
to the ground. This was God's answer to the poor widow's prayers. 
It is God's law that all works done for God should meet with difficul- 
ties and hindrances. "A work that begins with brilliant promise," 
St. Philip Neri used to say, "has not God for its author and pro- 
tector." 

3. Lastly the wisdom of God shows itself in directing the 
course of the world to carry out His purposes. 

All things in the world have a mutual relation to one another. If 
a man removes or displaces a single wheel in a watch, the watch stops ; 
so if anything were altered in the arrangement of the world, all things 
would be confused; e.g., without the birds the insects would soon 
destroy all vegetation. So the animals that serve us for food increase 
rapidly, while the beasts of prey breed but slowly. Nothing in the 
world is useless; the alternations of sunshine and rain, summer and 
winter, day and night, all serve some useful end. How useful is 
the uneven distribution of wealth, of the talents of men, etc. ! The 
smallest insect has its usefulness in the world; the butterfly, going 
from flower to flower, carries with it the fertilizing pollen. Even 
the destructive agencies in the world, storms, earthquakes, and 
floods, serve God's purposes, and are intended by Him to help 
men to save their souls. How wonderful, too, is the orderly course 
of the heavenly bodies! The movement of the earth around the 
sun, and of the moon around the earth, sei've to make this world 
a pleasant habitation for man. The beautiful arrangement of the 
universe compels us to recognize the wisdom and prudence of Him 
Who has created it. "How great are Thy works, O Lord ! Thou 
hast made all things in wisdom ; the earth is filled with Thy riches " 
(Ps. ciii. 24). 

6. God is almighty, i.e., God can do all that He wills, and that 
by a mere act of His will. 

God can do things which appear to men impossible, e.g., the 
preservation of the three young men in the midst of the fiery fur- 
nace of Babylon. A thousand similar wonders occurred in the time 
of the persecutions of the Christians. Our Lord says "With God 
nothing is impossible" (Matt. xix. 26). Yet God cannot do that 
which is in contradiction with His own perfections. He cannot lie, 
and lie cannot deceive. God could always have done more wonderful 
works than He has done. He could have created a more beautiful 
world than this and more creatures than He has actually made. 
When any of the creatures that God has made desires to do anything, 
he can only make use of the things that God has made, and in accord- 
ance with the laws that God has established. But God is bound by 
no laws save those of His own infinite goodness and truth. He has 
only to will a thing and wh?t He wills happens at once. " He spoke, 
and the heavens were created ; He commanded, and they were created " 
(Ps. cxlviii. 5). 



The Apostles' Creed. 121 

The omnipotence of God shows itself especially in the crea- 
tion of the world, in the miracles wrought by Our Lord, and in 
those miracles which before and after Onr Lord's time God has 
worked for the confirmation of the true religion. 

The earth is 24,899 miles in circumference; the sun is far larger, 
for its diameter is one hundred times greater than that of the earth. 
Some of the heavenly bodies are far greater ; some of them if they oc- 
cupied the place of the sun and were to begin to rise at 6 a.m., would 
not have completely risen above the horizon by 6 p.m. Our earth is 
over ninety-one million miles distant from the sun. A body travelling 
from the earth to the sun at the ordinary rate of a cannon-ball, would 
take twenty-five years to reach the sun. The planet JSTeptune, accord- 
ing to the latest information, is 2,794,000,000 miles distant from the 
sun. A cannon-ball would take eight hundred years to travel thence 
to the sun. There are stars outside our planetary system which are 
a million times further from us. Light which travels at the rate 
of 24,000 miles a second would take many millions of years to reach 
these stars, x^round our sun there move eight larger and two hundred 
and eighty smaller planets. The nearest (Mercury) is thirty-six 
million miles distant from the sun, and the most distant (ISTeptune) 
over two billion miles. There are also in the heavens thirty million 
Axed stars, all of them real suns and mostly larger than our sun, 
and around these move many other heavenly bodies. All these God 
has created out of nothing. How infinite, then, is the power of God ! 
Think also of the miracles wrought by Christ, the raising of Laz- 
arus, the stilling of the tempest, etc., the healing of the lame man 
at the Beautiful Gate of the Temple, the wonders that are now being 
worked at Lourdes, etc. " Who shall declare the powers of the Lord, 
or set forth all His praises ? " (Ps. cv. 2.) 

Since God is almighty, we can hope for help from Him in 
our greatest needs. 

God has a thousand different ways of helping us. He can send 
an angel to help us, as He did to St. Peter in prison; or work a mir- 
acle, as He did to feed the multitude in the desert ; as a rule He makes 
use of the most unlikely means, and thereby shows the greatness of 
His power. He freed Bethulia from the Assyrians by means of a 
woman. He saved the Israelites from their enemies by making a path 
through the sea. It is easy for the Lord to save by many or by few. 

7. God is supremely good, i.e., He loves His creatures far more 
than a father loves his children. 

God loves His creatures and loads them with benefits. He 
is love itself (1 John iv. 8). 

The spring cannot but send forth water and the sun light. The 
goodness of God differs from that of His creatures as the sun differs 
from the light shed upon a wall. His creatures are good, because 
God sheds His goodness upon them. Hence Our Lord says : " None is 
good but One, that is God " (Mark x. 18). 



122 Faith, 

1. The love of God extends to all the creatures that He has 
made (Wisd. xi. 25). 

As the sun lights up the boundless firmament, so God extends 
His goodness to all creatures. Not one of them is excluded from 
it. " Not one of them is forgotten by God " (Luke xii. 6). 

2. But God has an especial love for mankind. He im- 
parts countless benefits to them and sent His Son on earth to re- 
deem them. 

What wonderful bodies God has given us ! He has bestowed 
upon us our senses, and the gift of speech. How many gifts He has 
conferred upon our souls ! He has given us understanding, free will, 
and memory. For our bodies He gives us food, drink, clothing, health, 
etc. How well He has provided for our necessities on this earth: 
light, warmth, the air, the plants, the trees, and their various fruits. 
How many powers He has implanted in nature, for us to use for our 
own benefit: coal, salt, stone, marble, precious stones, etc. He has, 
in fact, made man the lord of the whole world. He loves us far more 
than we love ourselves. His love for us is far greater than that of 
the fondest mother for her child. The love of all creatures for God 
is not nearly as great as the love of God for each one of us. But 
above all, God has shown His love for us in this — that He gave His 
only-begotten Son for us (John iii. 16). Abraham could not show his 
love for God in any more perfect way than this, that he gave to God 
that which was dearest to him, viz., his only son. God did just the 
same; He gave us His dearest and best possession, His only-begotten 
Son. Our Lord says of Himself : " Greater love no man has than 
this, that a man lay down his life for his friends " (John xv. 13). He 
underwent His sacred Passion and death in order to prove the excess 
of His love for us. His attitude on the cross proclaims it. His head 
bowed, to give us the kiss of peace. His arms extended to embrace us, 
His Heart opened to admit us therein. In the Blessed Sacrament 
His love keeps Him in the midst of us, and seeks the closest union 
with us in holy communion. Finally He promised to grant all the 
prayers that we offer in His name (John xiv. 14). 

3. Among men God shows the greatest love to the just. 

"A perfect soul," says St. Alphonsus, " is dearer to God than 
a thousand imperfect ones." " To them that love God all things work 
together for good" (Rom. viii. 28). "O how great is the multitude 
of Thy sweetness, O Lord, which Thou hast hidden for them that 
fear Thee" (Ps. xxx. 20). God rewards the good works of the just 
far beyond what they deserve. He repays them a hundredfold, even 
in this present life (Matt. xix. 29). He loves the just in spite of 
their sins and imperfections, just as a mother loves her child ten- 
derly in spite of its many defects. 

4. God manifests His love even to sinners. 

God continues to confer graces and benefits upon sinners until 
the last moment of their life (Matt. v. 44). He sends them troubles 
to bring them to repentance. He finds some good in all, and He also 



The Apostles' Creed, 125 

loves them for what He hopes they may become. The love of God 
is like the powerful magnet that draws iron to itself. Sometimes 
there is an obstacle in the way, so that the piece of iron cannot reaclr 
the magnet, but the magnet continues to draw it all the same. Sq 
God continues to draw sinners, even though they do not come near ta 
Him. God hates only the devil and the lost. Even in hell He shows 
His goodness by not punishing the lost as much as they deserve. 
It is because of God's love for men that hell will be so intolerable. 
The lost will say, " If God had not loved us so much, we should not be 
so miserable now." Since God loves us so dearly we should love Him 
dearly in return (1 John iv. 10). We should not be afraid of Him, 
but should draw near to Him with childlike confidence. Since 
God is so good to us we must also be good to our fellow-men. God 
has given us a command to love Him, to love our neighbors, to love 
our enemies, and also to perform works of mercy. God also wishes us 
to be kind and merciful to the brute creation. 

_ 8. God is very patient, i.e., He leaves the sinner time for re- 
pentance and a change of life. 

Men are wont to punish quickly ; not so God. He endures long the 
rebellion of the wicked. It is not the will of God that a sinner 
should die, but that he should be converted from his wicked ways, and 
live (Ezech. xviii. 23). God often gives men long warning of coming 
judgments. He gave those who lived in the days of l^oe a warning 
of one hundred and twenty years ; to the Xinivites of forty days ; to 
the Jews a warning of forty years before the destruction of Jeru- 
salem. A storm does not break at once; we are forewarned by the 
gathering clouds and the darkness ; so God warns us of coming pun- 
ishment. He does not at once cut down the barren tree (Luke xiii. 
8, 9). God's manner of action is opposite to that of man. Man 
constructs slowly, and destroys quickly. God constructed the uni- 
verse in six days, but He took seven days for the destruction of the 
little town of Jericho. Even man prefers to build up, rather than 
to destroy ; much more so God. 

God is so patient with us because He has compassion on our 
weakness, and because He desires to make conversion easy to the 
sinner. 

God deals with us as a mother deals with a peevish infant; she 
presses it closer to her breast and coaxes it to be good. " Knowest 
thou not," says St. Paul, " that the goodness of God leadeth thee to 
penance ? " (Rom. ii. 4.) God deals with us patiently for oui* 
sakes, not being willing that any should perish, but that all should 
come to penance (2 Pet. iii. 9). With many sinners God's patience 
has not been lost, e.g., St. Mary Magdalen, St. Augustine, St. Mary 
of Egypt, etc., but with others it effects nothing. The same sunlight 
hardens mud and softens wax. If God were not patient with us, no 
one could be saved, for we are all sinners who have been unfaithful 
to Him. But though God is so patient, it is dangerous to pv* g5 
conversion. For the longer God delays His vengeance, the more 
terrible it is when it comes upon the sinner. It is just like an arro"^ 
5rom the bow ; the more the bow is drawn back, the greater the f orc9 



124 Faith. 

with which the arrow flies. Compare the awful end of Antiochus 
Epiphanes (2 Mach. ix. 5 seq.). We must not think, because God is 
so patient, that He has forgotten our sins. " Say not, I have sinned, 
and what harm hath befallen me ? The Most High is a patient re- 
warder " (Ecclus. V. 4). 

9. God is full of mercy and compassion, i.e., He very readily 
forgives our sins when we are sincerely sorry for them. 

Our Lord gives a beautiful object-lesson of the mercy of God in 
the story of the prodigal son. See how quickly God forgave the 
sin of David (2 Kings xii. 13). It is a property of God to have 
mercy and to spare. His mercy is infinite; like the sea, it has no 
bounds. God requires of us that we should forgive seventy times 
seven ; how immeasurably merciful therefore must God be ! 

The mercy of God especially shows itself in the way in 
which He seeks out the sinner, seeking to win him both by 
benefits and by the sufferings He inflicts; and also in the love 
with which He receives again and again the greatest sinner, 
after his conversion showing him a greater good will than before. 

God is like the good shepherd who goes after the lost sheep until 
he finds it (Luke xv. 4). God sent the prophet ITathan to David; 
He Himself sought out the Samaritan woman (John iv.). Often 
He sends troubles that through them the prodigal son may be brought 
to his senses. He is like a fisherman who tries every sort of device 
to entice fishes into his net. God is always ready to pardon even 
the greatest sinner ; for He says, " If your sinr b'^ as scarlet, they 
shall be made white as snow; and if they be red like crimson, they 
shall be white as wool" (Is. i. 18). In fact, the greater the sin- 
ner the more lovingly does God receive him if he is willing to 
amend. Hence David says to God, " Be merciful to my sin, for it is 
great" (Ps. xxiv. 11). God is like a fisherman, who is more glad to 
catch big fish than small ones. ISTo one is lost because he has com- 
mitted great sins, but many are lost because they have committed one 
sin of which they will not repent. Even Judas would have received 
forgiveness if he had asked for it. God sometimes forgives the sin- 
ner in the last moment of life. He received the good thief on the 
cross. Yet this is no reason for putting off repentance till the last. 
" God justified one man at the last moment that none might despair; 
but only one, that none might presume," says St. Augustine. A death- 
bed repentance is generally a very doubtful business; the dying sin- 
ner forsakes his sins rather because he cannot help it, than because 
from his heart he detests them; he is like the mariner who throws 
his goods into the sea simply from fear of death, not because he 
wishes to get rid of them. Witness how rarely a conversion made in 
peril of death proves lasting if the sick man recovers. " It is absurd," 
says St. Bernardin of Sienna, " that a man who would not fight when 
he was well and strong, should be moved to the combat when he is sick 
and weak." God also receives the repentant sinner most lovingly. 
See how Christ received with tender compassion Magdalen, the 
woman taken in adultery, and the thief on the cross (Luke vii. 47; 



The Apostles' Creed. 125 

John viii. 11 ; Luke xxiii. 43). How kindly the father of the prodigal 
son received him ! God receives the sinner far more kindly than that. 
" Before he knocks at the door, it is opened to him ; before he falls 
on his knees before Thee, Thou stretchest out Thy hand to him" (St. 
Ephrem). Our Lord says that there is more joy in heaven over one 
sinner doing penance, than over ninety-nine just men, who need not 
penance (Luke xv. Y). The reason of this is that the sinner who 
does penance generally serves God more zealously and faithfully. God 
bestows upon the sinner after his conversion greater benefits than He 
did before he went astray. The father of the prodigal son killed the 
fatted calf, and made a great feast, with music and dancing. Some- 
times the benefits God bestows on the converted sinner are external, 
more often they are inner consolations and graces. Witness St. 
Paul, raised to the third heaven (2 Cor. xii. 2). The Good Shepherd 
has more joy over the return of the one wandering sheep, than over 
the ninety-nine that never went astray. 

10. God is infinitely holy, i.e., He loves good and hates all evil. 

God's holiness is nothing else than a love of His own infinite per- 
fections. He is free from the faintest stain, and therefore desires 
that all should be like to Himself. How pure is the blue heaven 
on which there is no cloud! How pure is the white snow on which 
no spot is to be found ! Yet God is infinitely purer. Even angels 
are not pure in His sight (Job iv. 18). The purity of the angels as 
compared with that of God is like the light of a lamp compared with 
the light of the sun. " All our justice is like a soiled rag before Thee, 
O God ! " (Is. Ixiv. 6.) He says to us : " Be ye holy, because I am 
holy" (Lev. xi. 44). With this object He implants in our breast the 
natural law (conscience) ; with this object He gave the law on Mount 
Sinai; with this object He attached evil consequences to evil deeds. 
And to cleanse the just from the impurities that cling to them. He 
purifies them by suffering (John xv. 2). He also cleanses them by 
the fire of purgatory, since nothing unclean can enter heaven. Why 
is it that the saints and angels in heaven are represented as dressed 
in white garments ? Why is it that at Baptism a white robe is given 
to the newly baptized ? Be pure and holy, and then you will be a child 
of God. 

11. God is infinitely just, i.e., He rewards all good and pun- 
ishes all evil deeds. 

God's justice is identical with His goodness. He punishes men to 
make them better, and to make them happy. 

1. God punishes and rewards men partly on earth, but 
chiefly aft^r death. 

Good actions bring men respect, sometimes riches, health, and a 
peaceful conscience. Bad actions bring just the opposite. Abraham, 
l^oe, the patriarch Joseph, were rewarded in this life. Absalom, the 
sons of Heli, and Antiochus Epiphanes were punished in this life. 
But it is in the next life, and especially after the resurrection, that 
body and soul alike will receive their full reward. If all sins were 
punished in this life men would not believe in the Judgment D^y. 



126 Faith. 

If none were punished here they would not believe in God^s retribu- 
tive justice (St. Augustine). 

2. God rewards the least good action, and punishes the 
smallest sin. 

Chi'ist tells us that even a cup of cold water given in His name 
will have its reward. A mere look or gesture will meet with its due 
reward. Christ tells us that we shall give account for every idle word 
(Matt. xii. 36). 

3. God punishes men for the most part in kind, i.e., in the 
same way in which they have sinned. 

" By what things a man sinneth," says the Wise Man, " by the 
same he also is tormented." Absalom prided himself on his long 
hair and it caused his death. The rich glutton sinned with his palate 
and it was his tongue and palate that were tormented in the fire of 
hell. Antiochus tormented the seven Machabean brethren by tearing 
and maiming their flesh, and his own flesh was eaten by worms (2 
Mach. ix. 6). Aman wished to hang Mardochai, and prepared a 
gallows for him, and on the same gallows he was himself hanged. 
The women of Bethlehem would not shelter the Mother of God and 
the divine Son, and their children perished at the revengeful and 
cruel hand of Herod. Napoleon I. imprisoned the Holy Father, and 
in his turn was imprisoned first in Elba, and then in St. Helena. 
In these and many similar events, the Christian sees the finger of 
God. 

4. In rewarding and punishing, God has regard to the cir- 
cumstances of the individual, and especially to the intention 
with which he acts, and to the talents that he possesses. 

Men judge from the outward appearance of any action, God 
judges from the heart (1 Kings xvi. 7). The poor widow who threw 
in only two mites into the treasury of the Temple, had more merit 
before God than many of the rich men who gave large gifts (Luke 
xxi. 4). The servant who knows his lord's will and does it not, will 
receive more stripes than the servant who did not know the will of 
his lord (Luke xii. 47, 48). The more knowledge any one has of 
God, the more severely will God punish him for his sins. 

5. God is no respecter of persons. 

Many who are first in this world will be last in the world to come. 
The story of the rich glutton and poor Lazarus is an instance of this. 
Many who have their names in the mouths of men, and in the records 
of their country, will not have their names written in the book of 
life. 

Because God is a God of perfect justice we have good reason 
to fear Him. 

Christ exhorts us to fear God, Who is able to cast both body and 
soul into hell (Matt. x. 28). On account of one single sin, that of our 
first parents, millions of men have to suffer pain and death; and 



The Apostles' Creed. 127 

countless numbers will be forever miserable. Thence we gather how 
God hates sin. The same conclusion follows from the fact that Our 
Lord had to die an agonizing death to atone for sin. Who, then, can 
fail to fear God ? But our fear of God must be a filial, not a servile 
fear, i.e., we must fear not so much the punishment of sin, as the 
offence against God. A filial fear is the result of a great love of God. 
Yet we must try and avoid, from fear of punishment, those sins from 
which the love of God is not suflacient to deter us. 

The fear of God is of great advantage to us; it keeps us back 
from sin, leads us on to perfection, and insures for us peace and 
happiness both in time and in eternity. 

The fear of God keeps us back from sin. It was the fear of God 
that held back the aged Eleazar from eating swine's flesh (2 Mach. 
vi. 26). He Y>-ho fears God knows no other fear. As the wind drives 
away the clouds, so the fear of God drives away fleshly lusts, and en- 
ables us to escape the snares of the devil. He who fears God casts 
aside all attachment to things of earth, as the mariner in danger 
throws overboard the wares that otherwise would sink his ship. As 
the needle pierces the stuff and makes way for the thread, so the fear 
of God prepares the way for the love of God and for every virtue. 
" The fear of God," says the Psalmist, " is the beginning of wisdom " 
(Ps. ex. 10). The fear of man is full of bitterness and makes a man 
a slave; the fear of God is full of sweetness, and makes him a free 
man. The fear of God brings with it honor and glory ; it is crowned 
with joy and gladness, it gladdens the heart, and gives strength and 
happiness and long life, " Blessed is the man that f eareth the Lord " 
(Ps. cxi. 1). The more we fear God now, the less we shall fear His 
judgments at the Last Day. 

The fear of God is a special grace given by God to those who 
love Him. 

The fear of God is a special gift of the Holy Ghost. God says 
of His people, " I will give My fear in their hearts, that they may not 
revolt from Me." Hence our prayer should be, " Pierce Thou my 
flesh with Thy fear" (Ps. cxviii. 120). 

12. God is a God of perfect trutii, i.e., all that He reveals to 
man is true. 

God cannot err for He is omniscient; He cannot deceive for He 
is all-holy. " God is not as a man that He should lie, nor the son of 
man, that He should be changed " (I^umb. xxiii. 19). Hence we must 
believe all that God has revealed, even though our feeble understand- 
ing cannot comprehend it — e.g., the mysteries of the Christian relig- 
ion, the Blessed Trinity, the Incarnation, the Blessed Sacrament of 
the Altar. 

13. God is faithful, i.e., He keeps His promises and carries 
out His threats. 

See how exactly God carried out His threat of death to our first 
parents, and His subsequent promise of a Redeemer. See again how 
exactly Our Lord's prediction of the destruction of Jerusalem was 



128 Faith. 

fulfilled; and how the prophecy of Daniel, that the Temple would 
never again be rebuilt (Dan. ix. 27) was accomplished; for when 
Julian the Apostate made an attempt to rebuild it, an earth- 
quake destroyed the foundations, and flames issuing from the ground 
compelled the builders to fly. Promises and threats are necessary to 
move our feeble wills. Our Lord used the fear of punishment as an 
incentive to virtue. Ordinary men are more influenced by fear than 
by any higher motive. With them the fear of hell is a stronger mo- 
tive for virtuous living than the hope of heaven. God threatens us 
out of mercy. The man who cries " Beware " does not want to strike. 
So God threatens punishment that He may not have to punish. 

Hence all that Our Lord and the prophets have foretold 
either has already happened, or will happen in the future. 

The time will therefore never come when the Catholic Church 
will be destroyed, or when the Papacy will cease to exist (Matt. xvi. 
18). The Jews will all be converted before the end of the world 
(Osee iii. 5). Awful signs in the heaven and earth will precede the 
final judgment (Matt. xxiv. 29). If we trust our fellow-men they 
give us their promise on paper; how much more should we trust 
Christ, since He has left us whole books, i.e., the Scriptures, filled 
with His promises ! 

J,. THE BLESSED TRINITY. 

At the baptism of Jesus Christ all the three persons of the Blessed 
Trinity manifested themselves; the Father by a voice from heaven, 
the Son through His baptism, and the Holy Ghost in the form of a 
dove (Matt. iii. 16). 

1. The Blessed Trinity is one God in three persons. 

The three persons are called Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. 

The number three is often found both in nature and in religion. 
There are three persons in the Holy Family ; three parts in the sacra- 
ments (intention, matter, and form) ; Our Lord hung for three hours 
on the cross, and remained three days in the grave. He taught on 
earth for three years, and has the triple office of Prophet, Priest, and 
King. So in time there are past, present, and future ; three kingdoms 
in creation, the material, the vegetable, and the animal worlds. The 
number four is also of frequent occurrence; there are four gospels, 
four cardinal virtues, four seasons of the year, four thousand years 
from the Fall to the Incarnation, etc. The number seven is also com- 
mon ; there are seven days of the week, seven sacraments, seven works 
of mercy, seven gifts of the Holy Ghost, seven sacred orders ending 
in the priesthood, etc. Three is sometimes called the number of God, 
four the number of the world, by reason of the four continents, and 
seven represents the combination of the two. 

2. We cannot, with our feeble understanding, grasp the doc- 
trine of the Blessed Trinity, and it is therefore called a mystery. 

yfid are unable to comprehend that there are three persons in 
God, yet only one God, He who gazes at the sun is dazzled by it: 



The Apostles* Creed, 129 

if he continues to gaze at it he loses his sight. So is it with the 
Blessed Trinity; he who inquires into it is dazzled. He who refuses 
to believe in it because he does not understand it, is like a blind 
man, who will not believe in the existence of the sun because he can- 
not see it. How many things there are in nature that we cannot un- 
derstand! We cannot understand the growth of plants, trees, and 
animals; we cannot understand the nature of electricity and mag- 
netism. We cannot understand how the color red is formed by the 
vibration of the ether at the rate of one hundred and thirty millions 
of vibrations in a second, or violet by double that number. To 
count the vibrations of the ether that take place in one second in 
the forming of the color violet, we should have to go on counting 
for more than ten thousand years without ceasing either day or night. 
Much less can we understand what belongs to God. Jeremias says, 
" Great art Thou, O Lord, in counsel, and incomprehensible in 
thought" (Jer. xxxii. 19). "JSTo one understands what Thou art, O 
God, except Thou Thyself." We can, however, understand something 
of the nature of the Blessed Trinity by comparing it with certain 
facts of nature which in some way correspond to and illustrate it. 
The flames of three candles placed together form but one flame; 
the white light can be divided into red, yellow, and blue rays, which, 
however, together form but one light. The orb of the sun, its light, 
and its heat, are three different things, which are at the same time 
really one. The soul of man contains memory, understanding, and 
will, which are but different manifestations of the same spiritual 
substance. Yet all these are but imperfect analogies, and cannot 
carry us very far in attempting to understand something of the in- 
comprehensible mystery of the Blessed Trinity. Unbelievers some- 
times say : " How is it possible that three can be one, and one three ?" 
They show that they do not know what the teaching of the Church 
really is. " They blaspheme those things that they know not " ( Jude 
10). The Church does not say there are three persons and one person, 
but there are three persons, and one nature or essence. 

3. The nature, the attributes, and the works of the three per- 
sons of the Blessed Trinity are common to all of them. 

There are therefore not three gods, but one God. 

The Father is therefore different from the Son, because He is 
a different person ; but He has not a different being, because He has 
the same nature. 

For this reason each of the three persons is, in exactly 
the same sense, omniscient, omnipotent, eternal, and absolutely 
perfect, as are the other two. 

When Our Lord spoke of His return to the Father, He said, 
" My Father is greater than I " (John xiv. 28). Here He was speak- 
ing of Himself as man ; else He could not have spoken of His return 
to the Father. 

Hence the creation of the world, the redemption and the 
sanctification of men is wrought by all the three divine 
persons together. 



130 Faith. 

Yet we are accustomed to say : " The Father made the world, 
the Son redeemed it, and the Holy Ghost sanctifies it." 

4. The three divine persons are divided only in their origin. 

In a tree the trunk comes forth from the root, and from both 
comes the fruit. Such is the relation between the three divine per- 
sons. 

God the Father has no origin and proceeds from no other 
person; God the Son proceeds from the Father; God the Holy 
Ghost proceeds both from the Father and from the Son. 

In order to mark the order of procession, we name the Father 
first, the Son second, and the Holy Ghost third. But there is no 
succession in time; the Son proceeds from the Father from all 
eternity, and so does the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son. 
The Son is begotten of the Father before all creation. The Father 
produced, by an act of divine knowledge, the Son as an image like 
to Himself in all things, just as we, when we think, produce an intel- 
lectual image in our minds. We may illustrate this by the relation 
existing between fire and light. Light proceeds from fire, but is 
contemporaneous with it. If there were an eternal fire, there would 
also be an eternal light. The Son is the brightness of God's glory 
(Heb. i. 3), the unspotted image of His majesty (Wisd. vii. 26). 
Just as one torch is kindled from another, without the first losing 
any of its light, so the Son is begotten of the Father, without taking 
anything away from Him. The Son is called the Word of the Father 
(John i. 1). Just as the word formed in our minds (the thought) 
is made manifest by the external or spoken word, so the Word of God, 
dwelling in the bosom of the Father, was made manifest to the world 
when the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us (John i. 14). As 
the Son has His origin in the knowledge of God, so the Holy Ghost 
has His origin in the love of God. The Holy Ghost is none other 
than the mutual love of the Father and the Son. He is the Spirit 
of love, who engenders in our hearts the love of God and of each 
other. The word spirit is well chosen, because by it we express the 
attractiveness and the force of love. The Holy Ghost proceeds from 
the Father and the Son, as warmth proceeds from the sun and its 
light. 

On account of the difference in their origin we appropriate 
to the Father the works of omnipotence, to the Son the works of 
wisdom, and to the Holy Ghost the works of love. 

These various works have a certain correspondence with the 
attributes of the persons, that are connected with their origin. The 
Father begets the Son; for this reason there is appropriated to Him 
the bringing of perishable things also, out of nothing, i.e., of crea- 
tion. He is therefore called the almighty Father. He is also called 
the God of compassion, because He is ever ready to receive the sinner 
who comes back to Him in a true spirit of penance. The Son is the 
eternal wisdom of the Father. To Him therefore is appropriated the 
beautiful arrangement of the world. As the artist, through the work- 



I%e Apostle^ Creed. 131 

ing of his reflective mind designs the plan of his work, so tne Father, 
through His Son, produced order in the world. To the Son, too, is 
ascribed the restoration of order, as for this end He took upon Him- 
self the nature of man. To the Holy Ghost, as the mutual love of 
the Father and the Son, are ascribed all the benefits of God to man; 
especially the bestowal upon him of his natural life in creation (the 
Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters), and of his spiritual 
life by his sanctification through grace. To Him, as the finger of 
God's right hand, are ascribed all miracles, and above all the work of 
the Incarnation, as being of all miracles the greatest. The love of 
God has ever occupied itself with men, but the Incarnation of the 
Son of God by the operation of the Holy Ghost surpassed all other 
benefits wrought by Him. It brought mercy to sinners, truth to the 
erring, life to those who were dead, and hope and faith to the whole 
world. 

5. We are taught the mystery of the Blessed Trinity by Christ 
Himself, but it was partly known in the time of the Old Testa- 
ment. 

We know, from the fact of creation, the infinite power, wisdom, 
and goodness of God, but it does not reveal to us the mystery of the 
Blessed Trinity. Nor is there any proof of this doctrine to be found 
in nature, though we may find certain analogies to it, some of which 
we have given. But the mystery itself can only be made known to us 
by revelation. " The Father no man knoweth but the Son, and he 
to whom the Son shall reveal Him" (Matt. xi. 27). Our Lord re- 
vealed this mystery to His Church when He said to His apostles be- 
fore His ascension, " Go and teach all nations, baptizing them in the 
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost " (Matt, 
xxviii. 19). In the time of the Old Testament the Jewish priests, 
when they blessed the people, had to repeat the name of God three 
times (Numb. vi. 23). Isaias tells us that the seraphim in heaven 
cry, "Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of hosts" (Is. vi. 3). Before the 
creation, God said, "Let us make man" (Gen. i. 26). David says, 
" The Lord said to My Lord, sit on My right hand." But before the 
Incarnation the mystery of the Blessed Trinity was veiled in a cloud 
which was only dispelled under the New Law. " The Church," says 
St. Hilary, "knows this mystery. The Synagogue believed it not. 
Philosophy understood it not." 

6. The belief in the Blessed Trinity is expressed in the 
Apostles' Creed, in Baptism, and in the other sacraments, in all 
consecrations and blessings, and in the feast of the Most Holy 
Trinity. 

The mystery of the Blessed Trinity is the foundation of our 
religion. Without a knowledge of this truth we cannot understand 
our redemption by the Son of God. We ought frequently to make an 
act of faith in this mystery, especially by the repetition of the Gloria 
Patri. We should repeat it whenever we receive any benefit from 
God, and also when He sends us any cross or trial. 



133 Faith. 



5, HISTORY OF CRFATION. 

"We are instructed by the writer of the book of Genesis in 
the story of creation. 

The account given of the creation in the book of Genesis is not 
a fable, but is founded on truth. The sacred writer was enlightened 
by the Holy Ghost, and his words are a part of the Word of God. 
Perhaps God gave him a vision of the course of creation. The story 
is in exact agreement with the conclusions of natural philosophy. 
All investigations into the crust of the earth show that organic life 
was developed in the order set forth in Genesis. 

1. Ill the beginning God created the spiritual and material 
universe. 

"In the beginning" — i.e., in the beginning of time, when there 
was nothing else existing except God. Time began with the world, 
so that before the creation there was no time. Holy Scripture does 
not tell us when the world was created. The world may have existed 
for millions of years before the creation of man. The fact that it 
takes millions of years for the light of some of the heavenly bodies 
to reach the earth, seems to show this to have been the case. 
" Created," i.e., made out of nothing. How God produced the mate- 
rials out of which the world was made we know not. Instead of the 
spiritual and the material world, St. Paul says, " things visible and 
invisible " (Col. i. 16). The words of Genesis are, " In the beginning 
God created the heaven and the earth." The heaven does not mean 
the star-bespangled sky, the creation of which is narrated subse- 
quently (Gen. i. 6-8; 14-19). It means the abode of the angels and 
the saints. The material world is called the earth, because the earth 
is for men the most important part of the material world. The first 
words of the Bible, " God created heaven," are intended to remind 
man of his last end and future destiny. 

The spiritual world consists of the angels, and the heaven 
where they dwell. 

The angels are called the " Morning-stars " (Job xxxviii. 7), be- 
cause they were created before this material world, and in the morn- 
ing of the universe. Hell was not created at the beginning of the 
universe (Matt. xxv. 34), but at a later period, after the fall of 
the rebel angels (Matt. xxv. 41). 

The material world includes all things which are found in 
the visible universe. 

Men are a union of spirit and body, and were created later. 

2. The material world was at first without form, without in- 
habitants, and without light. 

God first created the material elements out of which the world 
was formed. Natural philosophy tells us that the world existed fi/st 



TJie Apostles' Creed. 133 

of all in the form of a vast mass of vapor, and that this vast mass 
gradually was condensed, under the influence of an intense heat, into 
the material universe. This is perfectly in accordance with the 
account of the creation given in Genesis. 

3. God gave to the material universe its present .form in the 
course of six days. 

The days are probably long periods of time, consisting of many 
thousands of years; for the seventh day, the day of rest, lasts until 
the end of the world. Moreover four of the days were already 
elapsed before the sun was formed, and therefore they cannot have 
been days as we now understand the word. The word day is chosen 
because the week of creation was to be a sort of pattern of our present 
week. 

On the first day God made the light. 

We read in Genesis that God said, " Let there be light,'' and there 
was light. The expression, " Let there be," denotes that something 
came into existence which did not exist before. This was the 
luminous matter which is now gathered in the sun ; it is not dependent 
on the sun, but the sun on it. The gaseous matter was at first un- 
formed, i.e., it had no forces. God imparted to it the law of gravita- 
tion, by means of which the various particles of matter were set in 
motion and drawn together, and thus wer^ condensed gradually into 
a solid mass. By this process warmth, and at last fire, were developed. 
On the first day fire, the main source of light, was produced by the 
movement given to the gaseous particles, and the existing vapor 
was condensed into masses endowed with fire and light. 

On the second day God made the firmament. 

The words of Genesis are, " God said. Let there be a firmament 
made amidst the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters. 
And God called the firmament heaven" (Gen. i. 6, 8). On this day 
there was a separation, arrangement, and establishment of the created 
masses, which were divided into parts according to their constitution 
and magnitude, parted from one another, and arranged in the places 
that God had destined for them. This planting of the various worlds 
in their places in space constituted the " firmament," which God 
called " heaven," in which the sun and moon and stars pursue the 
course that was allotted to each. This firmament is the material 
heaven, as opposed to the spiritual heaven which is identical with the 
celestial paradise. The earth on which we live was one of the con- 
densed masses which took its place among the other heavenly bodies. 
God at the same time divided off the planets that move around 
the sun, which forms the centre of their system from the fixed stars 
(v. 7). 

On the third day God made the dry land and the plants. 

Here the sacred writer concerns himself more especially with our 
earth. The earth, which was originally a fiery ball of gas, gradually 
lost its heat, as it cooled down in the midst of space. The great 
masses of mist divided themselves off into the sea and land. The 



134 Faith, 

solid elements were drawn together, and formed the crust of the 
earth, through which the water forced itself from within. Thus were 
made the various oceans or seas, and by this upheaval the surface of 
the earth as it exists at present was gradually formed, with its con- 
tinents, and islands, its mountains and valleys. Under the influence 
of the warmth of the earth the moist surface was now ready for the 
development of organic life. This did not arise out of nothing, like 
the original primary matter; it was already implanted in the earth 
by almighty God, and was evolved therefrom as soon as circumstances 
favorable to its development presented themselves. ]^o organic life 
can arise from mere inorganic matter. !N'o possible combination of 
mere inorganic materials can ever produce any kind of organic life. 
The original germs out of which life arose were already existing in 
the vapor-cloud out of which the earth was formed, but were not able 
to develop themselves under the conditions of extreme heat and cold. 
They remained as undeveloped germs until the more moderate tem- 
perature enabled them to produce plants and trees under the influence 
of warmth and moisture. 

On the fourth day God made the sun, moon, and stars. 

On the fourth day of creation, the earth, which had been involved 
in darkness by the thick mist that surrounded it as long as it had not 
fully cooled down, began to have a clearer atmosphere, and only a 
few clouds floated over its surface, instead of the dense vapor that 
had encircled it. The shining bodies in the heaven became visible; 
the sun began to exercise an influence upon the earth, and produced 
the alternations of day and night, and the various seasons of the year. 
The sun had previously a feeble power of radiation, but during this 
fourth period it assumed its present form. We do not know whether 
there exist living beings on any of the stars ; if there are such, they 
must be of a very different nature from our own. We know that in 
the moon there is no atmosphere, no fire, no water, no sound, no rain, 
no wind, no vegetation, and a long night of three hundred and fifty 
hours. 

On the fifth day God made the fishes and the birds. 

On the sixth day God made the animals and, last of all, man. 

The animals were next made in order to proclaim the power of 
their Creator by their number, variety, greatness, strength, and 
cleverness, and also to serve man, to nourish him, clothe him, and 
labor for his benefit. Man was produced the last of all the animals, 
and surpasses them all in dignity, and in the possession of reason and 
free will. Man is the crown of God's creation. God prepared the 
world for his reception, that he might enter and take possession of it 
as a king takes possession of his kingdom. The world would not have 
been complete without man; all else was made for his sake. In all 
the rest of the work of creation God simply said " Let it be," but 
before PIo created man lie is represented as taking counsel with 
Himself. This is to show the importance and the dignity of man. 

4. On the seventh day God rested from all His work that He 
had done. 



Tlie Apostles' Creed. 135 

God^s rest consists in this, that on the seventh day He brought 
nothing more into existence. It was the working out, without any 
further creative action on the part of God, of the order that He had 
established. The fact that God rested does not mean that He ceased 
from working (John v. 17). God must continue to work in the world, 
else it would cease to exist. As God rested after His work, so we 
shall one day rest in Him when our work is done. 

From the story of creation we learn that God made the world 
after a fixed plan. 

God in creation proceeded from the lower to the higher. He first 
made all things that were necessary for what was afterwards to come 
into life, e.g.. He made first the plants and then the animals that 
needed them for food. In the first three days He separated the 
various parts of the world from each other; in the three following 
days He developed and adorned creation. The three first days corre- 
spond to the three last ; for on the first He made light, on the fourth 
luminous bodies ; on the second He separated water and air from each 
other, on the fifth He filled the water with fishes and the air with 
birds ; on the third He made the dry land and on the sixth He filled it 
with animals. 

From the account of creation we also learn that the world 
is not eternal. 

The heathen thought that the world sprung from the accidental 
concurrence of a number of eternal atoms. But the present wonder- 
ful order could not possibly have arisen by chance, and the atoms are 
all dependent on one another, and therefore could not be eternal. 
The atoms, too, could never have put themselves in motion. Others 
thought that the materials of the world were eternal, and that God 
simply arranged them. Others imagined that the world was de- 
veloped out of the divine essence (the Pantheists). But this would 
make the world indivisible and unchangeable, and we know that 
this is not so. God indeed is everywhere, but the world is not God; 
it is something different from Him, and separated from His being. 

From What J and for what End has God Created the World? 

1. God made the world out of nothing, simply because it 
pleased Him to make it. 

Man can only make anything out of pre-existing materials. God 
made the materials. Men have to employ implements, they have to 
labor, and require a certain time to produce their work. God spoke, 
and the world was made. He did not need even to speak ; all that was 
needed was that He should will what He desired done. 

All that God created was very good. 

God Himself commended His own works (Gen. i. 31). The world 
was very good, because it in no way diverged from the divine idea 
but was in perfect accordance with it. God praised His own works, 



136 Faith. 

because no one else could praise them sufficiently. We also should 
praise God in His works, as the three young men did in the fiery 
furnace at Babylon. Evil is evil, because creatures make a bad use 
of their free will. ISTothing that exists can be bad in itself, but every- 
thing must at least be in some way good. 

2. God was moved to make the world by His great goodness. 

His object was to make His reasonable creatures happy. 

As a good father shows pictures to his children, to please them and 
make them love him, so God has manifested His works to His 
reasonable creatures, to make them happy and earn their love. God 
made all earthly things for our good; some for the support of men 
(plants and animals), some for their instruction, some for their en- 
joyment, some for their trial, as sickness, suffering, etc. " All 
things that I see upon the earth," says St. Augustine, " proclaim that 
Thou hast made them from love of me, and call upon me to love 
Thee." God did not need the world. He made it for our sakes. 

3. The end of creation is necessarily to proclaim to men the 
glory of God. 

In every work we have to distinguish between the end of the 
maker of the work, i.e., that which moved the artificer to make the 
work, and the end of the work itself, i.e., that for which the work 
is destined. In a clock, e.g., the end of the maker of the clock is his 
own profit ; the end of the clock is to indicate the time. In the world 
the motive of the Artificer is God's great goodness; the end of the 
work is God's glory and the happiness of His reasonable creatures. 
The motive of the countless number and variety of living and life- 
less beings and the innumerable number of the stars, is that angels 
and men may know and admire the majesty of God. The end and 
object of the existence of angels and men are that they may unceas- 
ingly behold and praise God (Is. vi. 3). St. Augustine says, " Thou 
hast made us for Thyself, God, and how unquiet is our heart so 
long as it finds not its rest in Thee !" Even the devils are compelled to 
contribute, in spite of themselves, to the glory of God; for by their 
punishment they show how holy and just God is, and God employs 
them also for the perfection of His elect through resistance to their 
temptations. Even the lost in hell manifest the justice and holiness 
of God and His hatred of sin. " God has made all things for Him- 
self ; the wicked also for the evil day" (Prov. xvi. 4). Yet God did 
not make the world with a view to any increase in His glory ; for God 
is infinitely happy in Himself, and has no need of anything or any 
one outside of Himself. 

Since we are made for the glory of God, we should in all our 
works have the intention of honoring God. 

St. Paul instructs us that, " whether we eat or drink, or whatever 
we do, we should do all to the glory of God " (1 Cor. x. 31). Nothing 
is easier than to give glory to God, since we can direct our most mi- 
nute actions to this end. When we wake in the morning, and often- 
times during the day we should renew this intention. 



The Apostles' Creed, 137 



6. DIVINE PROVIDENCE. 

We call by the name of divine providence God's preservation 
and government of the world. 

1. God maintains the world, i.e., He preserves all creatures in 
existence as long as He wills. 

A ball hanging from a piece of string falls to the ground as soon 
as the string is cut. So the whole world would sink into nothing 
if God were to withdraw from it His supporting power for a single 
instant. In order that creatures may continue to exist, He provides 
all that is needed for their sustenance : wheat, vegetables, the various 
fruits of the earth, etc. As soon as God wills it, they die. " When 
Thou shalt take away their breath, they shall die, and return again to 
the dust" (Ps. ciii. 29). If the sun were to cease to cast its rays 
upon the earth, all light would disappear from the world; so if God 
cease to support us in existence, our life at once fails us. When 
Our Lord says, "Heaven and earth shall pass away," He does not 
mean that they will be annihilated, but that they will be changed into 
a better. St. Peter says, " We look for a new heaven and a new 
earth, wherein dwelleth justice" (2 Pet. iii. 13). 

2. God governs the world, i.e.. He conducts all things in the 
world, so that they contribute to His glory and to our advantage. 

What the engine is to the train, and the pilot to the vessel, God is 
to the world. He guides the stars according to fixed laws, so that the 
firmament proclaims His glory. He guides all nations (Dan. iv. 32). 
We see His guiding hand in the lives of the patriarchs, in the history 
of the Jews, in that of the Christian Church. Yet we cannot under- 
stand God's arrangements at the first glance ; often we cannot under- 
stand them at all, and never shall till we get to heaven. Yet in our 
own lives we can trace again and again the good providence of God. 
But as to the world generally we are forced to exclaim, " How incom- 
prehensible are God's judgments, and how unsearchable His ways ! " 
(Eom. xi. 33.) 

There is no one on the earth for whom God does not care, 
and provide for his welfare. 

A mother would sooner forget her child than God would forget 
us (Is. xlix. 1.5). God cares even for the irrational creatures; for the 
beasts and birds and plants (Matt. vi. 25-30). 

God has a special c-are for those Avho are in humble circum- 
stances, and are despised by the world. 

God has made small as well as great, and cares equally for them 
(Wisd. vi. 8). God loves to declare His glory by means of the little 
(1 Cor. i. 27). He chose poor shepherds to receive the first news of 
the birth of Christ; He chose poor fishermen for Plis apostles; a poor 
maiden for His Mother; it is to the humble that He gives His grace 
(Jas. iv. 6). "He raises the needy from the earth, and takes the 



138 Faith, 

poor from the dunghill, that He may place him among princes " (Ps. 
cxii. 7, 8). 

Nothing happens to us all through our lives without the will 
or the permission of God. 

Hence the patriarch Joseph says to his brethren, " Not by your 
counsel was I sent hither, but by the will of God" (Gen. xlv. 8). 
Our Lord says that the very hairs of our head are all numbered, i.e., 
the providence of God descends to the smallest details of our life. 
Hence there is nothing that happens by chance. There are indeed 
many things, the causes of which v\^e are ignorant of, but all have 
some cause, and God guides all. There are many things in the world 
that God does not will, and of which He is not the cause, e.g., murder, 
theft, and every crime. But God permits them, i.e.. He does not 
prevent them. This is a consequence of His having given to man free 
will. Moreover, God knows how to bring good out of evil, and all evil 
He employs for His good purposes. 

Even the evil that God permits is for our good. 

God, in His love for us, has in all that happens to us the intention 
to make us happy. He turns to our good all temporal misfortunes, 
the temptations of the devil, the sins of other men. " To those who 
love God all things work together for good" (Rom. viii. 28). We 
see this in the history of tho patriarch Joseph; his imprisonment 
was the means of bringing him to high honor, and of saving Egypt 
from the horrors of famine. The captivity of the Jews was the means 
of spreading the knowledge of the true God among heathen nations 
(Tob. xiii. 4). The persecution of the early Christians in Palestine 
and in Home was the means of making known the Gospel in the 
countries to which they fled or were banished ; so, too, was the expul- 
sion of the religious Orders from Italy, France, and Germany in 
modern times. So again the persecution of the Irish has done much 
to Christianize America and England. " The unbelief of St. 
Thomas," says St. Augustine, " has been more useful to us than the 
belief of the other apostles." The sin of Peter made him humble 
and forbearing towards others. The fury of the Jews against Our 
Lord was the instrument of the redemption of mankind. " How in- 
scrutable are God's judgments and how unsearchable His ways ! " 
(Rom. xi. 33.) The very means employed by wicked men against the 
saints were the means of bringing them glory and honor. 

3. For this reason a pious Christian should resign himself en- 
tirely to the will of God. 

Christ teaches us to pray : " Thy will be done on earth, as it is 
in heaven." St. Peter exhorts us to cast all our care upon God, for 
He cares for us (1 Pet. v. 7). Holy David says: "Though an army 
should stand in battle against me, my heart will not fear " (Ps. xxvi. 
3). We must not allow ourselves to be troubled about the arrange- 
ments of God's providence, which we cannot alter, but must resign 
ourselves to the will of God, e.g., in sickness, loss of money, the death 
of those dear to us, persecution, war, etc. Above all we must resign 
ourselves to the will of God in the hour of our death. " He who dies 



The Apostles' Creed. 139 

resigned to the will of God," says St. Alphonsus, " leaves in the minds 
of others the knowledge that he has saved his soul." In order to gain 
the friendship of men we adapt ourselves to their humors and fan- 
cies; but we take too little trouble to win the friendship of God by 
adapting ourselves to His holy will. 

The man who cheerfully resigns himself to the will of God 
obtains true peace of mind, attains great perfection, and will be 
blessed by God. 

The soul resigned to the will of God is like the needle pointing 
to the North. The soul that submits itself to all God's arrangements 
has already begun to live the life of heaven upon earth. If trouble 
comes, its peace is not disturbed; every trial is extinguished, like a 
spark that falls into the sea; it loves sufferings, because it knows 
that they come from God's hand. A man resigned to God's will has 
his cross carried for him. He who renounces his own will in order 
to carry out the holy will of God, soon attains to perfection. Thus 
the resigning of our will to God's is the most perfect offering we can 
make Him. The man who is resigned is like a ship in the hands of 
the pilot ; he is sure to arrive safely into port. A farmer whose fields 
bore better crops than those of others was asked the reason for it. 
He answered that he always got the weather that he wanted. When 
asked to explain himself, he replied, " I am always content with the 
weather that God sends. This pleases God and so He blesses my 
crops." 

Our Lord in the Garden of Gethsemani is a beautiful exam- 
ple of submission to the will of God. 

Christ's prayer was " Father, not My will, but Thine be done." 
He was obedient to His heavenly Father even to death, the death of 
the cross (Phil. ii. 8). The holy angels find their happiness in the 
fulfilment of the will of God. St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi said, 
" I would bear with joy the heaviest troubles, so soon as I knew that 
they were the will of God." So also said all the saints. 

How are the Misfortunes of the Good and the Prosperity of the 
Wicked to he Reconciled ivith the Providence of God ? 

The answer is that these are only apparent, not real. Seneca says 
that the prosperity of those who are clad in purple is often like the 
splendor of the actor, who is dressed up in royal purple. The sinner 
after a time loses all enjoyment from his sins. 

1. ^o sinner has true happiness, and no servant of God true 
misery. For true happiness is impossible without inner peace 
and contentment; and this is possessed by the true servant of 
God, but not by the sinner. 

The world, i.e., riches, honors, sensual pleasures, eating, drinking, 
etc., can never give us true peace (John xiv. 27). This can only be 
attained by following the teaching of Christ. True peace and hap- 



140 Faith, 

piness are the fruits of the Holy Spirit. The wicked have no peace; 
they are like the raging sea, which cannot rest (Is. Ivii. 20). Peace 
and happiness do not come of riches, or of a high position, or of 
bodily strength, or of intellectual vigor ; still less do they come from 
the wearing of fine clothes, or from the enjoyment of rich feasts, but 
from peace of soul and a good conscience. The beggar at the gate of 
the rich Dives was a happier man, even in this world, than Dives him- 
self. 

2. Moreover the good fortune of the sinner is for the most 
part only transitory. 

The prosperity of the wicked is like the cedar of Lebanon, which 
in a few hours is cut down and is no more seen. It is a building 
built on sand: the storms and winds soon lay it low. How quickly 
Napoleon the Great fell from the height to which his vaulting ambi- 
tion had raised him at the cost of so many lives ! 

3. The real ^ jcompense of man only begins after death. 

Hence Our Lord says, " Many that are first shall be last, and the 
last first" (Matt. xix. 30). Many rich and distinguished men will 
be far below those who have been beggars at their door. God has pro- 
vided for His friends in the next life an enjoyment and happiness 
far surpassing any enjoyments on this earth. This is the explanation 
of the apparent injustice of the present life. Our Lord says to His 
disciples, " Amen, Amen, I say to you, that you shall lament and 
weep, and the world shall rejoice; and you shall be made sorrowful, 
but your sorrow shall be turned into joy" (John xvi. 20). 

4. Sinners are rewarded on this earth for the little good that 
they have done. The just on the other hand are for the most 
part punished in this life for the evil they have done. 

Our Lord says, " "Woe to you that are rich ; for you have your con- 
solation," i.e., your reward for the good you have done is given you 
in this world (Luke vi. 24). 

How is Sin to he Reconciled with the Providence of God? 

1. It is not God Who is responsible for sin and its conse- 
quences, but man's wrong use of his free will. 

God created man free, and therefore does not hinder even those 
free actions which are evil. There are also many reasons why He 
should not hinder evil. If there were no evil in the world, man would 
have no opportunity of doing what is good; he would not have the 
choice between good and evil, and would not be able to earn the 
reward of good accomplished. Compare the parable of the cockle 
among the wheat. " God," says St. Augustine, " would never have per- 
mitted evil if He had not intended to bring some greater good out 
of it." 

2. God in His wisdom employs even sin for a good end. 



The Apostles' Creed. 141 

The patriarch Joseph very truly said to his brethren, " You 
thought evil against me, but God turned it into good" (Gen. 1. 20). 
God turned to good even the treachery of Judas; it contributed to 
the work of man's redemption. The bee makes honey out of poi- 
sonous plants ; the potter makes beautiful vessels out of dirty earth. 
God does something similar to this. 

3. Besides, it does not become us to pry into the secret 
designs of God; we poor miserable creatures must adore His 
wisdom and submit ourselves humbly to what He ordains. 

What is true of sin, is true of all the suffering that is the con- 
sequence of sin. 

7. THE CHRISTIAN UNDER SUFFERING. 

Man can suffer in body or soul or both. The apostles, when they 
were scourged (Acts v. 41), suffered in body; Judas, when he threw 
down the pieces of silver in the Temple, suffered in his soul. Holy 
Job suffered in both. Suffering is either merited or unmerited. The 
sufferings of the prodigal son were merited, those of the patriarch 
Joseph were unmerited. Yet all sufferings are merited by original 
sin. 

1. No one can attain to eternal salvation without suffering. 

" 'No one is crowned unless he strive lawfully " (2 Tim. 
ii. 5). 

Even Christ had to enter into His glorj^ through suffering (Luke 
xxiv. 26). Our Lord says "He that taketh not up bis cross and 
foUoweth after Me, is not worthy of Me" (Matt. x. 38). The road 
to heaven is a rough one. In order to make the flax that grows in 
the earth into pure white linen, it must be rubbed, stretched, and 
thoroughly cleansed, and woven. The corn has to be threshed and 
winnowed; the pure gold has to pass through fire. Not to suffer is a 
sign that no future happiness is in store for you. Suffering and 
holiness are inseparably bound up together. There is no good work 
that does not meet with obstacles, no virtue that does not have to 
fight and struggle. 

For this reason God leaves no just man without suffering. 

God treats us as a physician treats his patients; those of whose 
recovery he despairs he leaves alone; but to those whom he hopes to 
cure, he administers bitter medi-cines. As milk is the food of chil- 
dren, so are contradictions the food of God's elect. To His chosen 
God gives a sword on earth to pierce their heart, and a crown in 
heaven to adorn their heads. Yet God mingles with the bitterness of 
suffering the sweets of consolation. We see this throughout the his- 
tory of Our Lady, which consists of alternate joys and sorrow^. So, 
too, we celebrate the seven joys and sorrows of St. Joseph. 

2. All suffering conies from God, and is a sign of His love and 
favor. 



142 Faith. 

We find in the lives of the saints that the more good works they 
undertook for God, the more did suffering assail them, as in the case 
of Tobias, and of holy Job. Sufferings seem to be the reward of good 
works performed. They are a precious gift, which will avail us to all 
eternity. To suffer something for God is in itself a great privilege and 
honor. It is a better gift than that of performing miracles and rais- 
ing the dead. Parents often punish their children to cure them of 
their faults. If they see the same faults in the children of others, 
they do not trouble themselves about them, because they do not care 
for them. So it is with God; the children whom He loves He often 
corrects. Hence Raphael said to Tobias, " Because thou wast pleas- 
ing to God, it was necessary that temptation should prove thee" 
(Tob. xii. 13). St. Paul says, " Whom the Lord loveth He chastiseth; 
and scourgeth every son whom He receiveth" (Heb. xii. 6). "Gold 
and silver are tried in the fire, and acceptable men in the furnace of 
tribulation" (Ecclus. ii. 5). The greater a saint, the greater were 
in most cases his sufferings. Our Lady was the Queen of martyrs. 
The apostles had to suffer much, especially St. Peter and St. Paul 
(Cf. 2 Cor. xi. 23, seq.). To be free from suffering is a bad sign. 
St. Augustine says : " There is no greater misfortune than the good 
fortune of sinners. He who does not suffer now will have to suffer 
hereafter." 

Yet God never sends us any suffering that is beyond our 
powers of endurance. 

St. Paul says " God is faithful ; Who will not permit you to suffer 
above that which you are able" (1 Cor. x. 13). The peasant knows 
how much his beast of burden can carry, and does not load him 
beyond his strength. Will God, the all-wise, the all-merciful, lay 
more on us than we can bear? The potter does not leave his vessels 
too long in the fire lest they should crack. He who plays on an in- 
strument is careful not to tighten the strings too much, lest they 
should break; nor too little, for then they would produce no sound. 
The physician apportions his remedies to the power of his patient; 
so the heavenly Physician sends us sufferings in proportion to our 
power of bearing them. There are some people who make sufferings 
for themselves, because they find fault with what gives no cause for 
complaint. Even in real sufferings much complaining is a sign of 
faint-heartedness and makes us more sensible to suffering. 

3. God sends suffering to the sinner to bring him back into 
the right way and to save him from eternal death. 

How many have been converted by means of sufferings, e.g., Man- 
asses in the prison at Babylon (2 Paral. xxxiii. 12, 13), Jonas, the 
prodigal son, even the wicked Achab (3 Kings xxi. 27). God is like 
a surgeon, who cuts away the diseased flesh that it may not cause 
death. Sufferings also bring about a disgust for earthly things and 
make the sinful pleasures of the world bitter; they destroy our depen- 
dence on earthly things, and take away the desire for the enjoyments 
and the pleasures of this valle;^ of tears, and turn our thoughts to 
heaven. Sufferings again impress upon us our own helplessness, com- 
pel us to have recourse to God in prayer. They teach us a knowledge of 



Tlie Apostles' Creed. 143 

•urselves and of our own sinfulness. As the trees, after the winter, 
flower and bring forth fruit, so does man after suffering bring forth 
works pleasing to God. " Sufferings," says St. Teresa, " though very 
hard to bear, are the surest way to God." 

God frequently sends bodily sickness to the sinner for the 
healing of the sickness of his soul. 

How many there are who have been converted to God through the 
means of bodily sickness, e.g., St. Francis of Assisi and St. Ignatius 
of Loyola. The Wise Man says, " A grievous sickness makes the 
soul sober" (Ecclus. xxxi. 2). In sickness God knocks at the door 
of the heart and asks for admission. " I am always glad," said St. 
Ignatius, " when I see a sinner fall ill, for sickness brings back to 
God." How foolish it is then to regard sickness as a mark of God's 
anger, when it is really a mark of His compassion. 

4. God sends suffering to the just man to try him whether he 
loves God most or creatures. 

Job, who had always lived a God-fearing life, lost all his prop- 
erty, his children, and his health, and was derided by his wife and his 
friends. Tobias had buried the dead at the peril of his life and 
given most liberal alms. God took away his sight, and left him 
poor and luiable to earn anything for himself. Thus God tries His 
friends. As the storm tests the tree, whether it is firmly rooted, 
so suffering tests the just, whether they are firmly established in their 
love of God. As the wind separates the chaff from the wheat, so 
trouble marks off the sinner from the just. Sweet herbs smell the 
sweetest when they arc bruised; so the just are most pleasing to God 
in the time of tribulation. God often takes away from us what we 
love best, and that which is injurious or dangerous, just as a father 
takes from his little child a razor or sharp knife. 

At the same time the sufferings of the just man are a great 
advantage to him; they serve him as a penance for his sins; they 
cleanse him from all imperfections; increase his zeal in the prac- 
tice of good, in the love of God, and in the love of prayer ; they 
also increase his merit in heaven, and often, too, his happiness 
in this world. 

By sufferings the punishment due for sin is cancelled. Hence St. 
Augustine prayed, " In this life, O Lord, burn, scorch, and wound me, 
only spare me in the life to come." " Think yourself happy," said 
St. Francis Xavier, " if you can exchange the agonizing pains of 
purgatory for sufferings in this world." Sufferings also purify the 
soul from its imperfections. Gold is tried in the fire ; so the soul is 
purged by suffering. "Every branch that bears fruit God purges, 
that it may bring forth more fruit " (John xv. 2). A sharp file cleanses 
iron from rust. As soap cleanses the body, so suffering cleanses the 
soul. Suffering also increases our strength, just as the blows of the 
hammer make the iron stronger and harder. Toil strengthens the 
body; suffering strengthens the soul. The vessels that the potter 
places in the fire come out hard and strong. Suffering also adds to 



144 Faith, 

our love of God. As the ark of ISToe was raised nearer to heaven 
by the floods that overspread the earth, so we are brought nearer to 
heaven and to God by the floods of suffering. As the gold leaf is 
spread out by the blows of the hammer, so our love of God is extended 
by suffering. Sufferings detach us from the love of earthly things, 
and destroy our love of this world. Hence St. Augustine prayed, 
" Make all things bitter to me, that so Thou alone mayest appear 
sweet to my soul.^' Sufferings also increase our gratitude to God, 
for the loss of health and other gifts of God makes us value 
what we have lost. Sufferings also make us humble. The just 
must be tried by evil, that so they may not grow proud of their 
virtues. Sufferings also increase the earnestness of our prayers. 
They compel us to pray. We see this in the case of the apostles 
in the storm-tossed boat. The prayers of David under persecu- 
tion have become the prayers of the Church. Long peace makes 
us careless and slack. The ox that is not stirred by the goad 
becomes lazy. Sufferings are often the means of bringing us to 
prosperity even in this world. Witness Job, the patriarch Joseph, 
and Tobias. " The Lord maketh poor and maketh rich ; He humbleth 
and He exalteth" (1 Kings ii. 7). "You shall be sorrowful," says 
Our Lord, " but your sorrow shall be turned into joy " (John xvi. 20). 
Lastly, sufferings increase our eternal happiness. Our present mo- 
mentary and light tribulation worketh for us above measure ex- 
ceedingly an eternal weight of glory (2 Cor. iv. 17). The just are 
ripened for heaven by suffering, as ears of corn are ripened by the 
heat of the sun. Jewels are rendered more beautiful by being ground 
and polished. " When God sends us some great trouble," says St. 
Ignatius, " it is a sign that He designs great things for us, and 
desires to raise us to great holiness." Nay, the more we suffer in this 
life, the greater will be our reward in the life to come. " To those 
who love God all things work together for good" (Rom. viii. 28). 
Give yourself up, then, to God's guidance, for He allows nothing to 
happen you which will not be for your advantage, though you may see 
it not. What pruning is to the fruit-tree, suffering is to men. 

5. Sufferings then are no real evil, but are benefits from the 
hand of God. 

They are the means of bringing us both to temporal and eter- 
nal happiness. 

God, Who loves us tenderly, has no other object in sending us 
sufferings but to make us happy. What we count as an evil is the 
bitterness of the medicine that is necessary for the health of our 
soul. There is really no evil in the world except sin. Sufferings can 
never really make us unhappy; men can be happy in spite of all 
kinds of sufferings. We see this in Job, in Tobias, in Our Lady. 
St. Paul says, " I am filled with comfort ; I exceedingly abound with 
joy in all our tribulation" (2 Cor. vii. 4). 

6. For this reason we should be patient under suffering, and 
should resign ourselves to the will of God. 

E'ay, more, we should rejoice in suffering, and thank God 
for it. 



The Apostles^ Creed, 145 

We should say with Job, "As it hath pleased the Lord, so it is 
done; blessed be the name of the Lord " (Job i. 21), or with Our Lord 
in the Garden of Olives, "Not My will, but Thine be done." We 
should behave as a sensible man behaves when he is sick ; he willingly 
obeys the injunctions of the physician. God has lightened our suf- 
ferings for us, not only by His own example, but also by the promise 
of an eternal reward. See how the apostles rejoiced in their scourg- 
ing (Acts V. 41). The Christian under suffering should rejoice as 
a workman rejoices who labors much, and looks forward to good 
pay, or as a tradesman, who amid the toilsome monotony of his busi- 
ness, thinks of the delightful holiday that is not far off. We must 
grasp sufferings as men grasp stinging nettles if they do not wish to 
be stung, firmly and boldly, not lightly and timorously; then they 
will do us no harm. In suffering we should repeat again and 
again the Gloria Patri. Men too often grumble and grow impa- 
tient under their sufferings. If a man asks the return of some- 
thing he has lent us, we give it back with thanks; but if God 
does so, we grumble and are discontented. This want of patience 
increases our sufferings, besides offending God. The impatient are 
like oxen, who kick against the goad and only wound themselves 
the more. Yet it is no sin to be sorrowful and troubled under suffer- 
ing; for Our Lord in the Garden of Olives was sorrowful even unto 
death. We must never despond in evil days, for after sorrow and suf- 
fering come joy and gladness. 

By patience under suffering we quickly attain to a high 
degree of perfection, and lay up for ourselves a great store of 
merit. 

When we resign ourselves patiently to the will of God amid con- 
tradictions, we are like a ship carried on by a strong breeze, and sail 
rapidly to the haven of eternal rest. "Blessed is the man that 
endureth temptation; for when he has been proved, he will receive a 
crown of life which Grod hath promised to them that love Him " ( Jas. 
i. 12). 

From our willingness to suffer can be ascertained how far 
we have advanced in perfection. 

The courage of a soldier displays itself, not in peace, but in war. 
The sinner murmurs under suffering ; the beginner is troubled, but is 
sorry for his impatience ; the man more advanced in virtue is fright- 
ened, but takes courage and praises God; the perfect man does not 
wait for suffering, but goes boldly to meet it. The perfect do not 
ask God that they may be free from temptation or from suffering. 
They desire it, and value it as highly as men of the world value 
riches and gold and precious stones. Hence the prayer of St. Teresa 
was either to suffer or to die. " He who is able," says St. Francis of 
Sales, " to thank God equally for chastisement and for prosperity, 
has arrived at the summit of Christian perfection, and will find his 
happiness in God." 



146 Fait\ 

8. THE ANGEL8. 

1. The angels are pure spirits. 

They can, however, take a visible forra. 

The angels are pure spirits without bodies, whereas men have both 
body and spirit. Yet the angels can take to themselves a bodily form, 
as did St. Raphael (Tob. v. 18), when he undertook to accompany 
the young Tobias on his journey. At the sepulchre of Our Lord, 
after the resurrection, the angels appeared in the form of young 
men, and the same was the case after Our Lord's ascension (Mark 
xvi. 5; Acts i. 10). 

The nature of the angels is nobler than that of man; they 
have greater knowledge and greater power. 

The angels excel all other beings that Our Lord has created. Our 
Lord says that not even the angels know when the Day of Judgment 
will come (Matt. xxiv. 36), thereby indicating that their knowledge 
is greater than that of men. So also is their power. An angel de- 
stroyed all the first-born of Egypt. Another angel caused the death 
of one hundred and eighty-five thousand soldiers of the King of 
Assyria, who had blasphemed God (Is. xxxvii. 36). An angel pro- 
tected the three young men in the furnace at Babylon (Dan. iii. 
49). 

God created the angels for His own glory and service, as 
well as for their own happiness. 

Among all the creatures that God has made, the angels resemble 
Him the most, and therefore the divine perfections shine forth the 
most brightly in them. They also glorify God by ceaselessly singing 
hymns of praise to Him in heaven. The angels also serve God. The 
word angel signifies messenger. " Are they not all ministering 
spirits," says St. Paul, " sent forth to minister to them that shall re- 
ceive the inheritance of salvation?" (Heb. i. 14.) Even the bad 
angels promote the glory of God, for God turns their attacks on us 
to His glory and our profit. Goethe rightly describes Satan as " a 
power that always wills evil, and effects good." 

The number of the angels is immeasurably great. 

Daniel, in describing the throne of God says : " Thousands of 
thousands ministered to Him; and ten thousand times a hundred 
thousand stood before Him" (Dan. vii. 10). Holy Scripture calls 
them the heavenly host. In the Garden of Olives Our Lord said that 
if He were to ask the Father, He would presently send Him twelve 
legions of angels (Matt. xxvi. 53). The number of the angels is 
greater than that of all men who ever have lived or ever will live. 
" The number of the angels," says St. Dionysius the Areopagite, " is 
greater than that of the stars in heaven, or of the grains of sand on 
the seashore." 

The angels are not all equal; there are nine choirs or ranks 
among them. 



The Apostles' Creed, 147 

The rank of the angels is determined by the amount of the gifts 
that God has given them, and according to the office assigned them. 
Nearest to the throne of God are the seraphim, who burn more than 
the rest with the love of God; next to them are the cherubim, who are 
distinguished by the vastness -^f their knowledge. We also read in 
Scripture of thrones, dominations, principalities, powers, and also of 
three archangels, St. Michael, St. Gabriel, and St. Kaphael. There 
is also a corresponding division among the fallen angels. 

2. All the angels whom God created were, at the beginning, 
in the grace of God and well pleasing to Him. But many of the 
angels sinned through pride, and were cast down by God into hell 
forever (2 Pet. ii. 4). 

When God created the angels, He created them all in His grace. 
But none can be crowned without a struggle (2 Tim. ii. 5), and God 
subjected the angels to trial, that so, according to the universal law of 
the universe, they might earn their reward of eternal happiness. 
In this trial a large number of the angels fell. They desired to be 
equal to God, and refused to submit their will to His (Cf. Is. xiv. 
12-14). They did not abide in the truth (John viii. 44). Hence 
arose a great war in heaven. Michael and his angels fought with the 
dragon, and the dragon and his angels fought, and prevailed not, 
neither was their place found any more in heaven. The dragon 
was cast out and all his angels with him (Apoc. xii. 8, 9). They 
were all cast down to hell; not that they were confined to any local 
hell, for they are allowed to wander about the earth tempting men, 
but i\\2j carry their hell with them wherever they go, inasmuch as 
they everywhere suffer the torments of hell. Their leader was Satan, 
or Lucifer, for this was his name before he fell, and he is said to have 
been the highest of all the angels. The number of the fallen angels is 
less than that of those who remained faithful. The fall of the angels 
was the more terrible, because they had previously enjoyed such a high 
estate. The higher the place from which we fall, the worse the fall. 
At the Last Day the evil angels will be judged, and their wickedness 
and its punishment will be made known to the whole world ( Jude 6 ; 
2 Pet. ii. 4). To deny the existence of the evil angels is a grievous sin 
against faith. 

3. The evil angels are our enemies ; they envy ns, seek to lead 
ns to sin, and can, with God's permission, injure us in our bodies, 
or in our worldly goods. 

The evil spirits are our enemies. With all their spite they can do 
nothing against God ; so they vent their fury against men, who bear 
the image of God. Many theologians have asserted that the places 
of the angels w^ho fell will be filled in heaven by men. " The knowl- 
edge that a creature of earth will occupy his place in heaven," says 
St. Thomas, " causes the devil more pain than the flames of hell." It 
was the devil who led our first parents to sin, and also Judas (John 
xiii. 27). The devil can also, so far as God peiTnits, injure the 
bodies and the goods of men, as in the case of Job and the possessed 
in Our Lord's time. The devil's great object is to effect the ruin of the 
Church, which he knows is to be the means of destroying his power 



148 Faith, 

on earth (Matt. xvi. 18 ; Luke xxii. 31). He also knows that he and his 
angels will one day be judged by the saints (1 Cor. vi. 3). Many be- 
lieve that as God assigns to each child at its birth a guardian angel, 
so the devil assigns to each a special devil to tempt it. Hence we 
must imitate the Jews when rebuilding the Temple (2 Esdr. iv. 17). 
We must work with one hand and with the other defend ourselves 
against the foe. 

Yet the devil cannot do real harm to any one who keeps 
the commandments of God and avoids all sin. 

The dog that is tied up canpot do any harm to those who keep 
out of range of his chain. The devil is like this dog. He can work on 
our memory and our imagination, but he has no power over our will 
or our understanding. He can persuade us, but he cannot compel us 
to evil. We must therefore energetically and promptly repel all bad 
thoughts that the devil puts into our heads. " Resist the devil," says 
St. James (iv. 7), " and he will fly from you." Our Lord dispatched 
the devil very promptly when He said ^' Begone, Satan ! " It is a 
great thing to treat the devil and his temptations with great con- 
tempt, and also to turn our thoughts to other things, and not allow 
ourselves to be disturbed or troubled by his suggestions. He who 
allows himself to dwell on evil thoughts draws near to the dog 
who is chained, and is almost sure to be bitten by him. H the devil 
were allowed to use his full power against us we could not resist him, 
for when he fell he did not lose any of his natural powers, though 
he lost eternal happiness. 

God gives the devil special power over some men : 

1. God often allows men who are striving after high perfec- 
tion, whom He especially favors, to be tried by the devil for long 
years in some extraordinary way, in order to cleanse them from 
their imperfections, and thoroughly humble them. 

God allows His elect to be constantly besieged by the devil 
for years, and to endure temptations of extraordinary violence. 
Sometimes the devil appears to them in visible form; sometimes he 
assails their ears with hideous sounds; sometimes he is permitted to 
strike them and to throw them on the ground. God protects their 
life, but allows the devil to torment them with bodily pain and with 
sickness. They suffer the most terrible temptations against faith 
and against purity. The evil one has no power over their souls, but 
sometimes God allows him power over their bodies, so that they do 
and say the most extraordinary things in spite of themselves, in order 
that so they may be humbled in the eyes of men. Sometimes they 
even pour forth blasphemous words, and have no power to prevent 
themselves from doing so. These assaults of the devil are called ob- 
session. Holy Job was assailed by the devil; and so was Our Lord in 
the desert; so were St. Anthony, St. Teresa, St. Mary ]\rngdalen of 
Pazzi, the Cure d'Ars, and many other saints. These holy persons 
knew that God would never allow them to be tempted beyond their 
powers of resistance, and that God permitted these temptations for 
their greater sanctification. They were perfectly resigned to the will 



Tlie Apostles' Creed, 149 

of God, and at length drove away the devil by their fearless resistance 
to his assaults. Thus when the devil threatened the life of St. Catha- 
rine of Sienna, she answered, " Do what you can; what is pleasing to 
God is pleasing to me." St. Mary Magdalen of Pazzi said to him, 
" You do not seem to know that you are preparing for me a glorious 
victory." St. Anthony in the desert defied him, saying, " How feeble 
3^ou are ! I suppose that is why you are bringing such a crowd of 
devils to tempt me." When those who are tempted meet the devil 
with the courage of a lion, he has no more power against them than 
a startled hare, but when they fear him, then he comes on with all the 
force and boldness of a lion. He can always be driven away by the 
means of grace provided by the Church; by the sign of the cross, by 
invoking the name of Jesus and Mary, by holy water, by earnest 
prayer, by the use of relics, etc. The more violent the assaults of 
the devil, the greater will be the protection afforded by almighty God 
to His servants; often during times of trial they have revelations 
from God, or saints and angels appear to them to console and 
strengthen them. Those who deny the reality of these occurrences, 
of which we so often read in the lives of the saints, show very little 
acquaintance with the spiritual life. Yet it is the spirit of the 
Church to receive all accounts of these preternatural and super- 
natural occurrences with great caution, as there is always a danger 
of illusion or deceit. Nor need ordinary mortals fear such special 
attacks of the evil one; they are reserved for the special friends and 
favorites of God. 

2. It also sometimes happens that God allows men of vicious 
lives, or those who sin against faith, to be punished or led astray 
by evil spirits. 

God sometimes permits that the bodies of men who have given 
themselves over to the indulgence of their passions be possessed by 
evil spirits, as a town is occupied by a general who has conquered it. 
This state is called possession. In the time of Our Lord there were 
many thus possessed, and who in consequence were dumb (Matt. ix. 
32), blind (Matt. xii. 22), and exceeding fierce (Matt. viii. 28). God 
permitted that then there should be many such, that He might show 
the power of the Son of God and the feebleness of the devils in His 
presence, and that He might drive them forth from those whom 
they tormented. Yet it does not follow that all who were possessed 
were necessarily so through their own fault. Some children were 
possessed from their birth (Mark ix. 20). Sometimes God allowed 
even holy men to be possessed for a time; but more often it was a 
punishment for grievous sin, and especially for a deliberate friend- 
ship with the devil, as was the case with the witch of Endor (1 Kings 
xxviii. 7 seq.; Cf. Acts xvi. 16). Such cases are not unfrequent now 
in pagan countries. God also permits the evil spirits to mislead 
those who practise spiritualism, which consists in the invoking of 
the spirits of the dead in order to discover things secret, or that are 
taking i)lace at a distance. The devils personate the spirits invoked, 
and by their superior knowledge are able to reveal many things, by 
which they delude those who deal with them into thinking that they 
are really conversing with some departed relative or friend. On 



150 Faith. 

these occasions the spirits will sometimes take a material form. 
Spiritualism leads to the loss of faith or of morals, or at least to the 
ruin of the peace of mind of the person practising it. Very often it 
is mixed up with a great deal of imposture. 

4. The angels who remained faithful to God behold the face of 
Grod continually and sing His praises. 

Our Lord says of our guardian angels, " I say to you, that their 
angels always behold the face of My Father Who is in heaven." The 
angels at Our Lord's birth sang the praises of God. Their songs of 
praise are different, just as their knowledge and their love of God are 
different. The angels are sometimes represented as children, because 
they are immortal and therefore ever young; sometimes wdth wings to 
express the swiftness with which they pass from place to place, and 
their promptness in cari-ying out the will of God; sometimes with 
lilies in their hands to show their perfect spotlessness ; sometimes 
with harps to signify that the praise of God is their constant employ- 
ment; sometimes without any body, but only a head and wings, to 
show that they are intellectual beings. The holy angels also possess 
exceeding beauty and splendor. If an angel were to appear in the 
firmament of heaven in his full glory, the sun would disappear before 
his brightness, just as the stars now disappear before the brightness 
of the sun. When St. John saw an angel in all his glory, he thought 
he must be God Himself, and fell at his feet to adore him (Apoc. 
xxii. 8). In appearing to men the holy angels hide their glory. The 
angels will be our companions in heaven. This is why they take so 
great an interest in us while we are on earth, and rejoice over the 
sinner doing penance. They often intervene to help us in our spir- 
itual and temporal needs, if we do not, by our resistance to grace, 
put obstacles in their way. 

5. The holy angels are also called guardian angels, because 
they watch over us (Heb. i. 14). 

Jacob saw a ladder reaching up to heaven, and the angels ascend- 
ing and descending (Gen. xxviii, 12). This was to signify that they 
come down on earth to protect us, and ascend back to heaven to sing 
praise to God. The guardian angels watch over us, as a shepherd over 
his flock. They count it as their happiness that they are appointed 
to watch over the servants of God, and promote the welfare of soul?, 
and no wonder, when we remember that the King and Lord of all 
things came " not to minister, but to be ministered unto." The service 
they render us causes them no trouble or anxiety, but rather joy and 
happiness, for their one desire is that the will of God should be done, 
and they rejoice in contributing to this. The general opinion of theo- 
logians is that every one has a special guardian angel, who watches 
over him all through his life. The dignity of the angels given to us 
depends on the dignity of the persons to whom they are assigned. 
Ordinary Christians have one of the lower orders of angels; priests, 
bishops, kings, etc., have nobler spirits to guard them. Cities, coun- 
tries, parishes, religious houses, have each their guardian angel. 

Our guardian angels help us in the following ways: 



The Apostles Greed. 151 

1. They put good thoughts into our minds, and move our 
will to what is good. 

The angels who appeared to the shepherds at Bethlehem, and who 
were seen at the tomb of Christ, and after His ascension, made them- 
selves visible and spoke to men; but generally they influence us with- 
out being seen or heard by us. They move us to some step that is 
conducive to the welfare of our souls or bodies, and often save us 
from some impending danger by a secret impulse, without which we 
should have incurred death or misfortune. 

2. They offer our prayers and our good works to God. 

Thus St. Raphael offered the prayers of Tobias (Tob. xii. 12). 
The angel in the Apocalypse offers the prayers of the saints in a 
golden censer (Apoc. viii. 3). This is not because God Himself 
does not hear our prayers, but the angels mingle their prayers with 
ours, and so make them more acceptable to God. " In all the benefits 
we receive from God," says St. Thomas, " our guardian angel takes 
part, because he helps in obtaining them for us." 

3. They protect us in danger. 

Thus St. Peter was delivered from prison by an angel (Acts xii. 
7 se^.), Daniel was kejjt safe in the den of lions, and the three young 
men in the fiery furnace (Dan. vi. 22; iii. 49). We read stories 
sometimes of children being run over, or falling from a height, and 
escaping unhurt. We can scarcely doubt that this was owing to the 
intervention of their guardian angels. God has commissioned the 
angels thus to help us. " He hath given His angels charge over thee, 
to keep thee in all thy ways. In their hands they shall bear thee 
up, lest thou dash thy foot against a stone" (Ps. xc. 11). But the 
chief office of our guardian angel is to presei*ve us from the snares of 
the devil; the holy angels have powers over the evil spirits, who fly 
away at their approach (Cf. Tob. viii. 3). We must therefore 
commit ourselves to the care of our guardian angels in all times of 
danger, and before undertaking a journey, or any new enterprise, 
and we should wish our friends when they start on a journey, the 
good wish of Tobias when his son was leaving his home, " May the 
angel of God accompany you ! " 

4. They often reveal to men the will of God. 

Instances in point are the sacrifice of Abraham, the message of 
the angel to Zacharias and to Our Lady. The appearance of an angel 
sometimes causes fear at first, but it soon changes to consolation and 
joy. It is just the opposite with the appearances of the evil angels; 
they give consolation to begin with, but this soon changes to confu- 
sion and fear. 

If we desire the protection of the holy angels, we must try 
and imitate them by a holy life; we must also honor them, and 
often invoke their aid. 

Experience teaches us that innocent children enjoy a wonderfui 
protection from the angels. Innocence attracts them, and sin drives 



152 Faith, 

them away, as smoke drives away bees. We cannot expect onr guar- 
dian angels to take care of us when we are doing what we know is 
displeasing to God. We must also beg for the aid of our guardian 
angel; we must congratulate him on his faithfulness to God; we must 
salute him when we go out and when we come in; we must thank 
him for all his benefits. We must say with Tobias, " What can be 
worthy of his benefits, and what can we give him sufiicient for these 
things?" (Tob. xii. 3.) The Church honors our guardian angels 
on the second of October ; in some places on the first Sunday in Sep- 
tember. 



9. MAN, 

The Creation of Man, 

The account of the creation of man is found in the beginning of 
the book of Genesis. Nothing is said about the time w^hen man was 
created, but the general belief fixes the date at 4000 B.e. The four 
weeks of Advent seem to indicate that the Church adopts this view. 

1. God made the body of man out of the dust of the earth, and 
breathed into him a living soul. 

The soul of man is a spiritual substance. The materialist who 
denies the existence of the soul because it cannot be perceived by his 
senses, might as well deny the existence of human reason because he 
cannot see it. The soul is endowed with the two faculties of reason 
and free will. Some have supposed that there are in man two souls, 
on account of the different inclinations which strive for mastery in 
him, and the struggle that takes place between the leaning towards 
sensual enjoyment and the reason that condemns it. But this 
struggle only proves that the soul has different tendencies, in virtue 
of our nature being partly material and partly spiritual. The rela- 
tions between the body and the soul of man are as follows : the body 
is the dwelling-place of the soul. As the nutshell to the kernel, as 
the dress to the man, as the hut to the hermit, such is the body to the 
soul. The body is also the instrument of the soul, whereby it may 
attain to eternal happiness. What his tools are to the carpenter, his 
brush to the painter, the organ to the organist, such the body is to the 
soul. The soul is the guide of the body, as the driver of his steed, 
or the captain of his ship. Too often the soul allows the evil desires 
of the body to lead it astray, to the ruin of both. The body is a good 
servant but a bad master. The soul also is the life of the body; as 
soon as the two are parted, the body soon returns to the dust from 
which it was formed. The souls of men are essentially different from 
those of the lower animals ; and have different faculties and capabili- 
ties. The souls of animals are incapable of striving after perfection, 
or of searching into the causes of things; hence they can have no 
knowledge of their end ; they are led by instinct, not by reason. They 
have no craving after a higher happiness and are quite satisfied with 
the enjoyment of sense ; they have no spiritual nature, but are essen- 
tially dependent on matter. 



The Apostles' Creed, 153 

It is an error to think that the bodies of men are developed 
out of those of the lower animals. 

Many think that men are >5prung from the lower animals by a pro- 
cess of gradual development. This is the theory advanced by the Eng- 
lish naturalist, Darwin, who believed that the first man was a highly 
developed kind of monkey. There is an essential difference between 
the shape of the body of a man and an ape, and between the form of 
their skulls. The brain of man is far larger and heavier than that of an 
ape. Man has the gift of speech, the ape has not. Man has the power 
of forming abstract ideas, the ape has not. Man has a long period of 
growth, and a gradual development of his faculties; the ape shoots 
up very quickly to its full development. The ape only lives about 
thirty years; man can attain to the age of eighty or even one hun- 
dred years. Man is capable of the highest cultivation ; the ape is not. 
No bones have ever yet been found which bridge over the impassable 
gulf that separates men from apes. There is no difference between 
the bones of men in the present day and those of men who lived 
thousands of years ago. Tradition and language bear witness to an 
early period when men enjoyed a higher cultivation, from which 
they afterwards fell away through sin and vice. The apes which 
bear the greatest resemblance to man in bodily form are stupid and 
without intelligence, and seem to have been created in order that we 
may see what man would have been if God had not breathed into 
him an immortal soul, and made him like to Himself. To those who 
trace the origin of men frora apes may be applied the words of 
Holy Scripture, " Man when he was in honor did not understand ; 
he hath been compared to senseless beasts, and made like to them" 
(Ps. xlviii. 21). 

2. The first human beings that God created were Adam and 
Eve. 

Eve was made from a rib of Adam while he slept, and from Adam 
and Eve all the millions who now cover the face of the earth were de- 
scended. Hence all are members of one and the same family. The dif- 
ferences of color and of the shape of the skull are the result of differ- 
ences of climate, food, and way of living. We find that animals grad- 
ually change their shape and color under a different climate. All men 
have certain common bodily characteristics, and also the mental facul- 
ties of will, memory, and understanding-. The olde<=t legends of all 
existing peoples tell of a primeval happiness from which man fell, of 
a deluge over all the inhabited portion of the earth, etc., and so bear 
witness to a common origin. 

Yet all men derive only their bodies from Adam; for the 
soul of every man is created by God. 

It is not man, but God, Who communicates to each of us his soul 
when he comes into existence. " The Lord f ormeth the spirit of man 
in him" (Zach. xii. 1). Just as the Holy Spirit in Baptism or in 
the Sacrament of Penance descends into the soul of man, and gives 
it spiritual life, so God gives natural life to the body of man when 
formed, and places the soul in it. So He did with the bodies of Adam 



154 Faith 

and Eve at their creation. God creates each soul and at the same 
moment places it in the body which He has prepared for it. It is 
therefore an error to suppose, as Tertullian did, that the soul of the 
child is sprung from the soul of its parent, as one flame is engendered 
from another. Some have foolishly asserted that all men have one 
and the same soul, others that God created the souls of all men when 
He first created the world. This was the doctrine of Plato and 
Origen, and is entirely false. 

10. THE SOUL OF MAN. 

1. The soul of man is made in the image of God, since it is a 
spirit like to God. 

Before the creation of man God said, " Let us make man to our 
own image and likeness and let him have dominion over the beasts and 
the whole earth" (Gen i. 26). Man is made in the image of God; 
his likeness to God is to be found in his soul, which possesses reason 
and free will, and thence has the power of knowing what is beautiful 
and good, and of loving it. He, moreover, through these two faculties 
has dominion over the visible world, as God has dominion over the 
whole universe. In the words spoken before the creation of man, 
God joined together the likeness of Himself and dominion over the 
earth. Man attains to a perfect likeness to God only when he is 
in the grace of God, for in this case he is made a " partaker of the di- 
vine nature " (2 Pet. i. 4). The just man is truly the lord of the whole 
earth and of all creatures upon it, whereas the sinner is the slave 
of creatures. Man, through his likeness to God, has not only the 
power of knowing the true and the beautiful and the good, but he has 
also the power of knowing, loving, and enjoying God in His divine 
majesty. Just as a globe has a feeble resemblance to the earth, so the 
soul of man has a feeble resemblance to God. The soul is also an 
image of the Blessed Trinity, in virtue of its three powers, memory, 
understanding, and will. In its memory it resembles the Father, in 
its understanding the Son, and in its will the Holy Ghost. As these 
three powders are united in one soul, so the three persons of the 
Blessed Trinity are united in one and the same nature. Notice the 
words used at the creation : " Let us make man," thereby indicating 
the plurality of persons in the Blessed Trinity. It is its likeness to 
the Blessed Trinity that gives to every single soul its priceless value ; 
it is this which explains the Incarnation. The soul of man is worth 
more than all the stars of heaven. The body of man is not made 
in the image of God, for God is a pure spirit, but yet the like- 
ness to God stamps itself in some way on the body, as being the in- 
strument of the soul, both in its upright bearing, and in the dominion 
it exerts over the irrational animals (Cf. Ps. viii. 5, 6). "What 
is man that Thou art mindful of him ? Thou hast crowned him 
with glory and honor, and hast given him dominion over the works of 
Thy hands." 

2. The soul of man is immortal, i.e., it can never cease to exist. 

The soul can never cease to exist, but it becomes spiritually dead 
when it loses the grace of God by mortal sin. It cannot lose con- 



TJie Apostles' Creed, 155 

Bciousness, but it can lose God. A branch that falls from the tree 
continues to exist, but is nevertheless dead. Sinners are thus dead, 
even while they live; the just on the other hand live even after they 
are dead. 

That the soul of man is immortal we know from the words 
of Jesus Christ. 

Our Lord says, " Fear not them who can kill the body, but cannot 
kill the soul " (Matt. x. 28), and to the good thief on the cross He says, 
"To-day thou shalt be with Me in paradise" (Luke xxiii. 43). He 
teaches the same truth in the story of the rich man and Lazarus 
(Luke xvi. 19). " God is the God of Abraham and Isaac and Jacob; 
and is not the God of the dead but of the living " (Matt. xxii. 32). 

We learn the same truth from the numberless appearances of 
the dead to the living. 

At Our Lord's transfiguration Moses appeared, who had been long 
dead (Matt. xvii. 3). At the time of Our Lord's crucifixion many w^ho 
were dead appeared in Jerusalem (Matt, xxvii. 53). The prophet Jere- 
mias and the priest Onias appeared to Judas Maccabeus before his 
\^ictory over Nicanor (2 Mach. xv. 11 seq.). Our Lady has constantly 
appeared to saints and to others, and so have many of the saints as 
vvell as those who are suffering in purgatory; sometimes to console 
and encourage the living, sometimes to warn them, and in the case 
of the holy souls, to ask for prayers. The lost rarely (and some think 
never) appear to men, unless it may be in some rare cases to warn the 
living. It is unlawful to invoke the appearance of the dead, and 
those who do so are tricked by the devil, who takes the form of the 
person invoked, or indicates their supposed presence by sounds, raps, 
etc. All true appearances of the dead are wrought by the instrumen- 
tality of the angels. We must be very cautious in accepting such 
appearances as real, but yet we ought not to reject them altogether. 
Many reject all such appearances, becaijse they know that, if they 
acknowledged them to be true, they would have to change their way 
of living, and this they are not willing to do. 

We can also prove from reason that the soul is immortal. 

Man has a longing after a perfect and lasting happiness. This 
longing is common to all men, and is implanted in them by their 
Creator. Such happiness can never be attained in this world — and 
therefore if man possessed the desire for it, without any hope of 
its being satisfied, he would be more unfortunate than the brutes 
who have no such desire, and God, in implanting it in his breast 
would be, not good, but cruel. If man had no immortal soul, the 
wicked who do evil all their lives long would go unpunished, and 
the just, who by self-sacrifice have robbed themselves of the enjoy- 
ments of life, would gQ unrewarded. This would be an injustice im- 
possible to a God of perfect justice. We are also conscious of an indi- 
vidual unity in each one of us, which is independent of our body, 
which perseveres in spite of all bodily changes, and continues from 
childhood to old age. It is present during sleep as well as during 
waking hours, and is active when all our bodily senses are wrapped in 



156 FaWi. 

repose and inactivity. St. Augustine tells a story of Gennadius, a 
physician of Carthage, who would not believe in the immortality of 
the soul. One night he had a dream, in which he saw standing before 
him a beautiful young man, clothed in white, who said to him : " Dost 
thou see me ? " He answered, " Yes, I see you." The young man 
rejoined, " Dost thou see me with thine eyes ? " " No," answered 
Gennadius, " for they are closed in sleep." " With what, then, dost 
thou see me ? " "I know not." The young man continued : " Dost 
thou hear me ? " " Yes." " With thine ears ? " " No, for these too 
are wrapped in sleep." " With what then dost thou hear me ? " 
" I know not." " Are you speaking to me ? " was the next question. 
" Yes." " With thy mouth ? " " No." " With what then ? " "I know 
not." Then the young man said : " See now, thou sleepest — and yet 
thou seest, hearest, and speakest. The hour will come when thou wilt 
sleep in death, and yet thou wilt see and hear and speak and feel." 
Gennadius woke, and knew that God had sent an angel to teach him 
the immortality of the soul. No particle of matter is ever lost. 
Matter takes different forms, but the same amount of matter remains 
throughout. If matter never perishes, is it possible that the soul, 
which belongs to a far higher order, is destined to perish ? 

All nations of the earth believe in the immortality of the soul. 

When Jacob heard of the death of his son Joseph, he expressed 
a wish to go and join him in the nether world (Gen. xxxvii. 35). 
The Jews were forbidden to call up the dead or hold intercourse with 
them (Deut. xviii. 11). The Greeks and Eomans believed in Tar- 
tarus and Elysium. The Egyptians believed that the soul wandered 
about for three thousand years before finding rest. In other nations 
the offerings for the dead, and the cultus of the departed spirits or 
Manes, testify to the same belief. There are only a few, and those 
men who are in mortal sin, who declare that they think that death is 
the end of our existence. Most of those who put an end to their lives 
do so, not with the idea that after death they will cease to be, but be- 
cause they imagine life is intolerable — not realizing tlie consequences 
of their act. 

11. THE SUPERNATURAL ENDOWMENTS OF MAN. 

Our first parents before the Fall had a happiness almost equal to 
that of the angels when first created. Hence the Psalmist says of 
man, " Thou hast made him a little lower than the angels ; Thou hast 
crowned him with glory and honor" (Ps. viii. 6). Heathen nations 
have legends of the happiness of the first man; they termed it the 
golden age. Hesiod says that men lived then like gods, in perfect 
happiness. 

1. Our first parents were created in the grace of God, and there- 
fore possessed singular perfections of soul and body. 

" Adam was created," says the Council of Trent, " in justice and 
holiness; he was a partaker of the divine nature." This justice and 
holiness he did not have of himself, but God gave it to him; just aS 
V)e eye does not possess light from within, but absorbs it from with- 
«at. 



The Apostles' Oreea, 157 

The special privileges granted to the soul of man at his first 
creation were as follows: An enlightened understanding, a will 
free from all weakness, and the possession of sanctifying grace. 
Through means of these he was the child of God, the heir of 
heaven, and well-pleasing in the sight of God. 

" God filled them with wisdom and the knowledge of understand- 
ing," says the Wise Man (Ecclus. xvii. 5, 6). He gave Adam an in- 
sight into the inner nature of things, so that he was able to give ap- 
propriate names to all the animals. He also knew by inspiration 
the indissolubility of marriage. The will of man was weakened by 
no sensual desires. Adam and Eve were naked, but felt no shame, 
because in them there was no rebellion of the flesh against the spirit, 
no struggle necessary to avoid sin. They also had the Holy Spirit 
dwelling within them, and His sanctifying grace; they were like to 
God, full of love for Him, and children of God ; and because children, 
also heirs of God and joint-heirs with Christ. 

The special perfections of their bodies were that they were 
immortal, and free from all liability to sickness and disease; they 
were in paradise, and had dominion over all the creatures around 
them. 

God created man immortal (Wisd. ii. 23). Death only came in as 
the punishment of disobedience (Gen. ii. 17). The death threatened 
was bodily as well as spiritual death, for the punishment of their sin 
was " Dust thou art, and unto dust thou shale return" (Gen. iii. 19). 
Man had indeed to work in paradise, but this work was part of his 
happiness, and caused him no fatigue. He had no sickness, for sick- 
ness is the forerunner of death. Paradise was a lovely garden, full 
of noble trees and lovely flowers, and the fairest fruits ; many beauti- 
ful animals were there, who were perfectly obedient to his behests. 
There was also a river in paradise divided into four br^inclies. In the 
midst of the garden was the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, 
and close by it the tree of life, the fruits of which were a protection 
against disease and death. Paradise is said to have been situated 
between the Tigris and the Euphrates. Man had also a complete 
dominion over all the wild beasts. Not that their nature was then dif- 
ferent from now, but the grace and dignity of man rendered them 
submissive to his will, and made them fear and obey him (Ecclus. 
xvii. 4). Something of this power still remains to man; it is said 
that no wild beast can look a man steadily in the face. We see the 
same thing in the natural order now, in the wild beast tamers; and 
in the supernatural in the power that many of the saints possessed 
over the wild beasts, e.g., St. Francis of Assisi, and many of the 
martyrs before whose feet the fiercest of the animals in the Roman 
amphitheatre lay down in prostrate homage. This was due to their 
great purity and freedom from sin. 

2. These special perfections of our first parents we call super- 
natural gifts, "because they are something altogether beyond, and 
were added to, human nature. 



158 Faith, 

Thus a rich man out of compassion provides a poor orphan with 
food, clothing, lodging, instruction in a trade. These would cor- 
respond to the natural gifts given by God to man. But the rich man 
in his bounty goes further; he adopts the orphan, clothes him as if 
he were his own son, gives him a room in his own house, and the edu- 
cation of a gentleman. These would correspond in some way to the 
supernatural gifts given by God to man. The first of natural gifts 
bestow upon the orphan a sort of likeness to the giver, but the second 
impart to him a far closer likeness. So the supernatural gifts of God 
to man impart to him a far closer likeness to God than the natural. 
Or to take another illustration; a painter can trace the portrait of a 
man with a few strokes in black and white. But if he takes his 
brush and colors the drawing, if he paints the eyes blue, the cheeks 
red, the hair brown, etc., the likeness becomes more beautiful and 
corresponds more closely to the original. So it is with the natural 
and the supernatural gifts of God. When God at man's creation said, 
" Let us make man in our image and likeness," the image refers 
to the natural, the likeness to the supernatural gifts of God. 



12. ORIGINAL 8IN. 

The story of the Fall of man is a true story, not a mere fable. 
This is the general opinion of theologians. 

1. God imposed on man in paradise a precept; He forbade him 
to eat the fruit of one of the trees which stood in the midst of the 
Garden of Eden. 

The fruit of the tree of good and evil was not bad in itself, for 
God did not place anything that was evil in paradise ; it was only bad 
and injurious to man because it was forbidden. 

By obedience to this precept God intended that Adam and 
Eve should merit eternal happiness. 

It was the intention of God to bestow upon our first parents 
eternal happiness — an inheritance that was to be theirs as chil- 
dren of God. But as a happiness that is earned is a greater happi- 
ness, and one of greater value than if it were bestowed without any 
action deserving of it, God in His goodness decreed that man should 
earn it as a reward of obedience. If man had not transgressed the 
command of God, he would have passed without pain and without 
death from the earthly into the celestial paradise. The posterity of 
Adam would have come into existence, like him, in a state of original 
justice. They would have died as Adam died if they had sinned like 
him, but the sin would not have passed on to their children, for Adam 
rilone was the appointed head and representative of the human race. 

2. Man allowed himself to be led astray by the devil, and trans- 
gressed the precept of his Creator. 

The devil was envious of the happiness of our first parents. " By 
the envy of the devil death came into the world" (Wisd. ii. 24). 
" The devil was a murderer from the beginning " (John viii. 4). He 



The Apostles' Creed. 159 

deceived Eve by a lie. Hence Our Lord calls him the father of lies 
( John viii. 4). He took a visible form because a mere internal suggestion 
would have had no power to influence the mind of our first parents 
in their state of original justice. He took the foi*m of a serpent, 
because God would allow him to take no other and the serpent 
was a fit emblem of his cunning and poisonous wickedness. St. 
Augustine tells us that Adam and Eve had already admitted the 
beginnings of evil by thinking little of God and allowing them- 
selves to be distracted by visible and palpable things. This was the 
occasion of the temptation. Their great happiness had made them 
unwary, and Eve foolishly lingered near the tree of the knowledge of 
good and evil, and listened to the serpent, instead of turning away at 
once. The common tradition among the Fathers is that Adam was 
created on a Friday and fell on the following Friday, at the same 
hour at which Our Lord on Good Friday died upon the cross. 

3. The transgression of the precept of God had disastrous con- 
sequences; man lost sanctifying grace, and all his supernatural 
gifts, and also suffered injuries both in soul and body. 

The disobedience of our first parents received this severe punish- 
ment, because the law given them was one that it was easy for them 
to obey, and because they had such a high degree of knowledge. The 
sin they committed was a mortal sin, else it would not have been 
necessary for God Himself to die upon the cross in order to expiate 
it. From the cost of the remedy we may judge of the deadly nature 
of the wound. Just as the man who fell among the thieves on the 
road to Jericho was robbed of his goods, and also sorely wounded, so 
man was robbed by Satan of his supernatural gifts, and was sorely 
wounded in his natural gifts. In other words, the supernatural like- 
ness to God was lost, and his whole nature, body and soul alike, was 
disfigured and weakened. 

Original sin injured the soul of man in the following ways: 
His understanding was darkened, his will weakened and made 
prone to evil; he lost supernatural grace and thus became dis- 
pleasing to God, and could no more enter into the kingdom of 
heaven. 

His understanding was darkened, i.e., he had not the same knowl- 
edge of the nature of God, of the will of God, the end of life, etc. 
His will was weakened, for by sin the harmony between his spiritual 
and his sensible faculties vras destroyed, so that the inclinations 
of his senses no longer submitted without revolt to the dominion 
of his reason. The flesh rebelled against the spirit in punishment 
for man's rebellion against God. Hence St. Pai;I says, " I see another 
law in my members, fighting against the law of my mind " (Rom. 
vii. 23). " The flesh lusteth against the spirit " (Gal. v. 17). Hence- 
forward man's nature was drawn towards the things of sense, as iron 
is drawn by the power of the magnet. Many other evil tendencies 
also arose in him. Doubt in the goodness of God, in His truth and 
justice; vanity and pride, etc. Eve, who had fancied that she was 
going to become like to God, condemned herself and her posterity to 



i60 Faith. 

a foolish curiosity, to a love of dress, and ill-timed loquacity. Man 
has not lost the freedom of his will by original sin, else he would not 
have that consciousness of being able to exercise choice, or that feel- 
ing of remorse when he had yielded. Our first parents also lost sanc= 
tifying grace, the justice and holiness in which they were created, 
and the friendship of God which accompanied it. He who dies still 
burdened with original sin cannot see the face of God in heaven, 
but he does not suffer the pains of hell unless he has committed 
grievous sin himself. Children who die unbaptized are excluded 
from heaven, but it does not follow that their existence is one of pain 
or misery. 

Original sin did injury to the body of man in the following 
ways: He became subject to sickness and death; he was shut out 
from paradise and had to labor and to suffer. Woman became 
subject to man; the forces of nature and the lower animals had 
power to injure man; lastly the devil had permission from God 
to tempt him to sin, and to injure him in his temporal posses- 
sions. 

Man was condemned to die in consequence of original sin. God 
said to Adam " In the sweat of thy brow thou shalt eat bread, until 
thou return to the earth from which thou wast taken; for dust thou 
art and to dust thou shalt return " (Gen. iii. 19). Of these words the 
Church reminds us on Ash Wednesday, when the priest places the 
ashes on the heads of the faithful. Death is the worst consequence of 
original sin. But the death of the body is but the sensible image 
of the terrible and eternal death of the soul, from which man can 
only be delivered through the redemption of Christ and by penance. 
The exclusion from the earthly paradise also had its meaning, and 
was meant to remind man how sin excludes him from the celestial 
paradise of heaven. Man had also to labor hard. God said to Adam : 
" Cursed is the earth in thy work. With labor and toil thou shalt 
eat the fruit thereof all the days of thy life" (Gen iii. 17). Be- 
cause of this curse the Church makes use of various blessings on 
material things. Woman had to be subject to her husband, because 
she had led him into disobedience, and had to bear children in sorrow 
because she had involved them in sorrow through her disobedience, 
The lower animals also received power to injure man. He had revolted 
against God, his Master; so it was only just that they should rebel 
against him. The devil has also a great influence over man, in ac- 
cordance with the saying of Holy Scripture : " By whom a man is 
overcome, of the same also he is made the slave" (2 Pet. ii. 19). He 
can tempt them more easily and lead them to mortal sin; he can 
also injure them in their worldly goods (Cf. Job). He is the prince 
of this world, and has the empire of death (Heb. ii. 14). A heavy 
yoke lies upon the shoulders of the children of Adam from the day of 
their birth to the day of their death (Ecclus. xl. 1). The punish 
ments that God sent upon man were a valuable medicine to counter- 
act the effects of sin. Sickness, death, the necessity of labor, and 
the subjection of men one to another were intended to check pride 
and sensuality. Man was driven out of paradise lest he should 



The Apostles' Creed, 161 

eat of the tree of life, and so live forever in this valley of tears. 
His banishment was also an effective means of leading him to 
penance. 

4. The sin of our first parents with all its evil consequences 
has passed on to their descendants. 

Not merely the consequences of sin, but the sin itself, has in some 
sense passed on from Adam to his descendants, so that it is true of 
all of them that they have sinned in Adam. If it were not so, God 
could not with justice have visited that sin upon them. We are all 
by nature children of wrath (Eph. ii. 3). But we partake in the sin 
of Adam, as the members of the body partake in the sin which the 
soul commits through their agency, by putting them in motion to 
perform the sinful act. Suppose a king bestows an estate upon one 
of his servants, on the condition that the servant remain faithful 
to him. He is unfaithful, and thereby loses the estate — not he only, 
but also his whole posterity. So it is with original sin. We must 
also remember that original sin and all its consequences are not any- 
thing positive, but are the absence of that which would otherwise 
be present. It is the absence of the supernatural grace of God; of 
original justice, with all the privileges and perfections that it carries 
with it. When we say that we have sinned in Adam, this does 
not mean that we have imitated Adam's sin by some positive act of 
our own. All children have sinned in Adam, even though absolutely 
free from any personal act of sin. 

The sin that we inherit from Adam is called original sin. 

We are already tainted with sin before we draw our first breath, 
or see the light of day. We are conceived in sin (Ps. 1. 7). Even the 
children of Christians are born in sin. Not only the seed of the 
wild olive, but also of the cultivated olive comes up as a wild plant. 
So is it with the children of Christian as well as of heathen 
parents. 

Only Jesus Christ and His holy Mother were free from origi- 
nal sin. 

All mankind save Christ and our blessed Lady were conceived in 
sin. St. John the Baptist (Luke i. 15) and probably the prophet 
Jeremias (Jer. i. 5), were born without sin, having been cleansed from 
sin in their mothers' womb, but they were not conceived without sin. 
Some believe that St. Joseph was also born free from sin. Ail other 
men were cleansed from sin in baptism. The history of man is un- 
intelligible to those who do not believe in the doctrine of original 
sin. Oh, how great is the misery that original sin has brought into 
the world I Yet how few there are who are conscious of their 
misery ! ^Nfen ,'^re like children born in slavery, who laugh, and play, 
and enjoy thomselves, as if they were free. It is only the saints, who 
know the emptiness of the joys of earth, who lament over the miserv 
of sin. 



162 Faith. 



SECOND TO SEVENTH AETICLE OF THE CREED : 
JESUS CHRIST. 

1. THE REDEMPTION. 

Our Lord Jesus Christ, Our Redeemer, has freed us from the 
evil consequences of sin. 

Man after the Fall was unable to regain for himself his former 
holiness and justice, and all the goods that were bound up with these. 
A man whose body is dead cannot raise himself again to bodily life; 
so one who is spiritually dead cannot raise himself again to spiritual 
life. Man after the Fall became like a sick man who cannot move 
hand or foot, or arise from the bed on which he is lying. What the 
Good Samaritan was to the man who had fallen among thieves. 
Our Lord is to the man who has been wounded by the craft of the 
devil and robbed of his spiritual and supernatural gifts. Jesus 
Christ is also called Our Saviour or Our Redeemer, because He 
saved us from hell and brought us back at the cost of His own 
precious blood. 

Christ freed us from the spiritual consequences of sin in the 
following manner: He enlightened our understanding by His 
teaching, inclined our will to good by His precepts and promises, 
and by His sacrifice of Himself upon the cross won for us 
the means of grace by which we once more attain to sanctifica- 
tion ard become the children of God and heirs of the kingdom 
of heaven. 

Christ took upon Himself a threefold office, that of Prophet or 
Teacher, Priest, and King. This threefold office he ascribes to Him- 
self under various titles. He calls Himself the Light of the world 
(John xii. 46), because He enlightens the darkness of our under- 
standing by His doctrine. As a light makes distant objects clear 
and visible, so Christ makes clear to us the most distant objects, 
God and His perfections, the world to come, heaven and hell, time 
and eternity. Before Pilate He calls Himself the King Whose king- 
dom is not of this world (John xviii. 36). He also calls Himself the 
Good Shepherd, Who gives His life for His sheep (John x. 11). He 
also often compares Himself to a guide or leader (John xiv. 6 ; Matt. 
X. 38). We are wanderers in this world; we have here no abiding 
dwelling-place, but seek one that is to come. The road is rough, 
steep, and surrounded with precipices, and we in our ignorance are in 
constant danger of wandering from the way. Christ undertakes to 
be our Guide. He says, " I am the way, the truth, and the life ^' 
(John xiv. 6). and He promises that if we take Him for our Guide, 
and follow in His sacred footsteps, we shall never go wrong. St. Paul 
calls Christ our great High Priest (Heb. ii. 17), Who needs not, 
like other priests, first to offer sacrifices for his own sins, and then 
for the people. By His obedience He atoned for Adam's dis- 
obedience ("Rom. V. 19), for He was obedient to death, even to the 



The Apostles' Creea. 163 

death of the cross (Phil. ii. 8). Christ opened heaven again to us 
by earning for us the means of grace. By which, and especially by 
the sacraments and holy Mass, we can obtain sanctifying grace and 
be made children of God. In opening heaven to us, Christ tore away 
the veil which shut us out from the holy of holies (Matt, xxvii. 51), 
i.e., from heaven, and by His blood gave us a sure hope of entering 
in (Heb. x. 19). The cross is thus the key of heaven for us. 

Christ freed us also from the consequences of sin as it affected 
our bodies; He has died instead of us, and has thus earned for 
us the resurrection of our bodies; He has by His teaching and 
His example taught us what we must do in order to be happy in 
this world, to overcome the world, and so to attain to the celestial 
paradise; lastly He has given us the means by which we may 
vanquish and drive far from us the enemy of our souls. 

By His own resurrection Christ insured for us the resurrection of 
our bodies. " By man came death, and by man came also the resur- 
rection from the dead" (1 Cor. xv. 21). By following the teach- 
ing of Christ, we shall secure true peace on earth (Cf. John iv. 13), 
and by practising the virtues that He taught us, especially humility, 
chastity, and liberality, we shall overcome the devil and the world. 
By the sacramentals we drive away from us the evil one. Christ has 
broken the power of the devil (Apoc. xii. 10, 11), but the final victory 
over him will be at the end of the world (1 Cor. xv. 24, 25 ; Cf. Luke 
X. 18). By the death of Christ we have won back almost all that was 
lost by original sin, though some of its consequences still remain, 
such as sickness, death, and evil tendencies. Yet we have won 
more by the death of Christ than we lost by sin. Where sin 
abounded, grace did the more abound (Eom. v. 20). Hence the 
Church exclaims in the Office for Holy Saturday: "O happy fault, 
which obtained for us so great a Eedeemer ! " 



2. TEE PROMISE OF TEE EEDEEMER. 

God forgave fallen man, though He had not forgiven the angels. 
Man's sin was not so grievous ; he had less light and knowledge, and 
moreover was tempted by them. Besides, he at once to some extent 
confessed and lamented his sin. Lastly God would not, for the guilt 
of one, thrust down into eternal banishment from Himself the whole 
race of men. 

1. Immediately after the Fall God promised man a Redeemer. 

For He said to the serpent, " I will put enmity between 
thee and the woman, between thy seed and her seed; she shall 
crush thy head " (Gen. iii. 15). 

The seed of the woman here referred to is Our Lord Jesus Christ, 
and the woman is in all probability the Blessed Virgin Mary. There 
is to be a complete enmity between Our Lord and His holy Mother 
on one side, and the devil and his friends on the other. These 



164 Faith 

words of almighty God are a promise that the power of th^ devil 
should be destroyed, and that the whole race of men, who through 
original sin had fallen under the power of the devil, in that he had 
great influence over them in persuading them to sin, should be freed 
from their subjection to him. These words are called the Protevan- 
gelium or first Gospel, inasmuch as they are the first promise of a 
Eedeemer to come. Yet He was not to come at once. Man had to 
learn by experience and by suffering the evil of sin, and by seeing 
the effects of God's anger against it, e.g., in the Flood, the destruction 
of the cities of the plain, in the destruction of the Tower of Babel, 
etc, 

2. Two thousand years later God promised to Abraham that 
the Redeemer should be one of his descendants. 

Abraham lived in Ur in Chaldea, and later in Haran in Mesopo- 
tamia. He preserved amid the idolatry around him the worship of 
the true God. God commanded him to leave his father's house, 
and journey forth into a land which was to be shown him. In 
reward for his prompt obedience God promised him that in him all 
the families of the earth should be blessed (Gen. xii. 2, 3). He 
directed his steps towards the fertile land of Palestine, and promised 
him a numerous posterity. Abraham is called the father of the faith- 
ful (Rom. iv. 11). God repeated the same promise when the three 
angels visited Abraham (Gen. xviii. 18), and again when Abraham, 
in obedience to God's command, offered up his only son Isaac (Gen. 
xxii. 17). 

The same promise that God had made to Abraham He re- 
peated to Isaac and to Jacob, and one thousand years later to 
King David. 

God appeared to Isaac when he was about to fly into Egypt on 
account of the famine in Palestine (Gen. xxvi. 2 seq.), and to Jacob 
when he was flying from his brother Esau, and saw the ladder reach- 
ing to heaven (Gen. xxviii. 12), and repeated to each the same prom- 
ise. To King David the prophet IS^athan announced, by God's com- 
mand, that He would raise up to him a son whose throne should be 
established forever (2 Kings vii. 13). The men who belonged to 
the family from which Christ was to be born were termed patriarchs. 
All the patriarchs reached a good old age. God had ordained this in 
order that they might hand down the knowledge of Him to their pos- 
terity. 

3. At a later time God sent the prophets, and through their 
mouth foretold many things about the coming, the birth, the 
person, the sufferings, the death, and the final triumph and glory 
of the Redeemer. 

The prophets were men enlightened by God (men of God), who 
spoke to the people of Israel in God's name and with His authority. 
Their chief task was to keep the people from sin, and to reprove them 
when they had sinned, and also to prepare the mind of men for the 
advent of the Redeemer. They were from different classes in society; 



The Apostles' Creed. 165 

Isaias was of royal blood, .Amos was a herdsman, Eliseus was 
called from the plough to the prophetical office. God gave them the 
power of working miracles, of foretelling His judgments, and also 
of prophesying respecting the Messias. Most of them lived a life of 
penance ; they were held in great veneration by the people, but were 
persecuted and in many cases suffered a violent death (Matt, xxiii. 
30). There were in all about seventy prophets. Moses was one of the 
greatest of the prophets (Deut. xxxiv. 10), and Isaias was greater 
still, on account of his clear prophesies respecting the Messias. The 
last of the prophets was Malachias, who prophesied about B.C. 450. 
Sixteen of the prophets left writing behind them. Four of these are 
called the greater prophets (Isaias, Jeremias, Ezechiel, Daniel) ; 
twelve the lesser prophets, on account of the smaller amount of their 
writings. 

4. Of the advent of the Messias the prophets have given the 
following account: 

1. The Messias was to be bom in Bethlehem. 

Micheas says : " Thou Bethlehem Ephrata, art a little one among 
the thousands of ^uda ; out of thee shall come forth unto me He Who 
is to be the Ruler in Israel ; and His going forth is from the beginning 
unto the days of eternity" (Mich. v. 2). Hence the three kings were 
informed that Christ would be born in Bethlehem (Matt. ii. 5). 

2. The Messias was to come at a time when the Temple was 
still standing. 

When the Jews after their return from captivity began to rebuild 
the Temple, the old men who had seen the former Temple began to 
weep. They saw from the character of the foundations that the new 
Temple would not be as large, nor as beautiful as the old one. The 
prophet Aggeus comforted them by telling them that in this new 
Temple " the Desired of all nations should come, and fill it with glory" 
(Agg. ii. 8-10). But this second Temple was destroyed by Titus 
seventy years after Christ, and was never rebuilt. 

3 The Messias was to come when the Jews no longer were 
an independent kingdom. 

Jacob, in blessing his sons before his death, said to Juda : " The 
sceptre shall not be taken away from Juda, till He come that is to 
be sent, and to Him shall be the expectation of the nations " (Gen. 
xlix. 10). From this time the tribe of Juda was the leading tribe 
(Xumb. ii, 3-9). King David was of the tribe of Juda, and so were 
his successors up to the captivity in Babylon. Zorobabel, who brought 
the Jews back from captivity, was of the same tribe. When the Jews 
regained their liberty, they were under the rule of the Maccabees, 
who also belonged to Juda. It was not till the year 39 B.C. that the 
Jewish monarchs were deprived of their sovereignty, and Herod the 
Great, a foreigner and a pagan, was raised to the throne by the 
authority of the Eomans. In the time of Herod a Redeemer was 
looked for all over Judea. Herod was alarmed at the inquiry of the 
Magi for the new-born King (Matt. ii. 3) ; the Jewish people thought 



166 Faith. 

that St. John the Baptist was the Messias (Luke iii. 15) ; the Samari- 
tan woman to whom Our Lord talked at Jacob's well was looking for- 
ward to the advent of the Messias (John iv. 25). The chief priest 
conjured Jesus to tell them whether He was the Messias (Matt. xxvi. 
63). As many as sixty impostors about this time gave out that they 
were the Christ, and deceived many. Even among the heathen there 
was, at the time of Christ, an expectation of a deliverer, who would 
banish crime and restore peace to the world (Cf. Virg., Eel. 9). 

4. The prophet Daniel (605-530) foretold that from the re 
building of Jerusalem (453), imtil the public appearance of the 
Messias, there would be sixty-nine weeks of years, and until the 
death of the Messias sixty-nine and a half weeks of years. 

This prediction was revealed to him by the archangel Gabriel, 
as he was one day offering the evening oblation, and was praying for 
the deliverance of his people out of captivity. Cyrus, in the year 
536, gave the Jewish people leave to return to Palestine and to rebuild 
their city. In the year 453 the King Artaxerxes gave his cup-bearer 
Nehemias full powers to fortify Jerusalem ; this had not been allowed 
by Cyrus, on account of which the Jews had been exposed to the con- 
stant attacks of their enemies. Now if we add to 453 sixty-nine 
weeks of years (483 years) we have the date of the commencement 
of Christ's public ministry or if we add sixty-nine and one half 
weeks of years (486y2 years) we have the date of the crucifixion (a.d. 
33%). 

5. The Messias was to be born of a virgin of the House of 
David. 

As a sign God gave to King Achaz the following prophecy : " Be- 
hold a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and His name shall be 
called Emmanuel [God with us]" (Is. vii. 14). And of the tribe of 
which the Messias is to be born the prophet Jeremias says, " Behold 
the days come, saith the Lord, that I will raise up to David a just 
branch, and a king shall reign and shall be wise, and shall execute 
judgment and justice on the earth" (Jer. xxiii. 5), and His name 
shall be " the Lord our just One." 

6. The Messias was to be preceded by a precursor or fore- 
runner, who was to preach in the desert, and to live an angelic 
life. 

Isaias says of this forerunner, that he was to be " the voice of 
one crying in the desert: Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make 
straight in the desert a path for our God " (Is. xl. 3). And God says 
through the mouth of Malachias " Behold, I send My angel, and he 
shall prepare My way before My face. And presently the Lord, 
Whom you seek, shall come to His Temple" (Mai. iii. 1). This pre- 
cursor was St. John the Baptist. 

7. With the Messias a new star was to appear. 

The prophet Balaam announced to the King of Moab, when the 
Israelites were approaching : " I shall see Him, but not now ; I shall 



The Apostles' Creed. 167 

behold Him, but not near; a star shall come out of Jacob, and a 
sceptre shall rise up from Israel" (Numb. xxiv. 17). 

8. The Messias was to be adored by kings from distant lands, 
and they were to bring Him gifts (Ps. Ixxi. 10). 

9. At the time of the birth of the Messias many children 
were to be put to death. 

We read in the prophet Jeremias, "A voice was heard on high, 
of lamentation and mourning and weeping; of E-achel weeping for 
her children, and refusing to be comforted, because they are not" 
(Jer. xxxi. 15). Rachel here represents the Jewish people. She died 
in Bethlehem and was buried there (Gen. xxv. 19). 

10. The Messias was to fly to Egypt, and to return again 
from thence (Osee xi. 11). 

5. Of the person of the Messias the following prophecies had 
been uttered: 

1. The Messias was to be the Son of God (Ps. ii. 7). 

Through the prophet Nathan God promises David the Redeemer, 
and says : " He will call Me Father and I will call Him Son " (2 Kings 
vii. 14). In a psalm God addresses the Messias: " Thou art My Son; 
this day have I begotten Thee" (Ps. ii. 7). 

2. He shall be at the same time both God and man. 

Isaias says, " A Child is born to us, and a Son is giveii to us ; and 
His name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, God, the Mighty, the 
Father of the world to come, the Prince of peace " (Is. ix. 6). 

3. He was to be a great worker of miracles. 

" God Himself shall come and save you. Then shall the eyes of the 
blind be opened and the ears of the deaf shall be unstopped. Then 
shall the lame man leap as the hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall 
be unstopped" (Is. xxxv. 5-7). 

4. He was to be a priest like to Melchisedech. 

" The Lord hath sworn and He will not repent : Thou art a priest 
forever after the order of ^lelchisedech" (Ps. cix. 4). Christ offered 
bread and wine at the Last Supper, and offers it daily in holy Mass 
through the hands of the priests who are His representatives. 

5. He was to be a prophet or teacher of the people. 

To Moses God had said, "I will raise up unto them a prophet, 
out of the midst of thy brethren, like to thee" (Deut. xviii. 18). 
Hence the Jews named the Messias, " the Prophet Who was to come 
into the world" (John vi. 14). As prophet the Messias was to teach 
and to prophesy. He was also to be the teacher of the nations (Is. 
xlix. 1-6). 

6. He was to be King of a new kingdom (Jer. xxiii. 5), 



168 Faith. 

which was never to be destroyed, and was to embrace all otheu 
kingdoms (Dan. ii. 44). 

This kingdom is the Catholic Church, or the Church of the whole 
world. Before Pilate Christ proclaimed Himself a king, and said, 
" My kingdom is not of this world," i.e.. His kingdom was to be a 
spiritual one (John xviii. 36). 

6. Of the sufferings of the Messias the prophets spoke as 
follows : 

1. The Messias was to enter into Jerusalem riding on an ass 
(Zach. ix. 9). 

2. He was to be sold for thirty pieces of silver. " And I took 
the thirty pieces of silver, and I cast them into the house of the 
Lord " (Zach. xi. 12, 13). 

The words of Zacharias were exactly fulfilled; Judas threw down 
the money in the Temple, and with it was bought a field belonging 
to a potter, as a burying-place for strangers (Matt, xxvii. 5-7). 

3. He was to be betrayed by one who ate at the same table 
with Him (Ps. xl. 10). 

Judas went out from the Last Supper to betray his Master (John 
xiii. 30). 

4. His disciples were to forsake Him at the time of His 
Passion (Zach. xiii. 7). 

5. He was to be mocked (Ps. xxi. 7), beaten, spit upon 
(Is. 1. 6), scourged (Ps. Ixxii. 14), crowned with thorns (Cant, 
iii. 11), and given gall and vinegar to drink (Ps. Ixviii. 22). 

The chief priests and Scribes at the crucifixion mocked Our Lord, 
and said among themselves, "He saved others; Himself He cannot 
save" (Mark xv. 31; Cf. v. 29). In the house of Annas a servant gave 
Him a blow (John xviii. 22). In the house of Caiphas, when He de- 
clared Himself the Son of God, the servants spit upon His face, and 
gave Him blows; Pilate had Him scourged (John xix. 1), and handed 
Him over to the soldiers, who crowned Him with thorns, put upon Him 
a purple robe (in mockery of the imperial purple), struck Him on 
the head with a reed, and derided Him (Mark xv. 15-19). On Gol- 
gotha they gave Him to drink wine mixed with gall, which, when He 
had tasted it. He would not drink (Matt, xxvii. 34). 

6. Por His garments lots were to be cast (Ps. xxi. 19). 

The soldiers divided His garments into four parts, and gave to 
each soldier a part. His coat they woidd not divide, for it was with- 
out seam, woven from the top throughout. They therefore cast lots 
for it (John xix. 23). 

7. His hands and feet were to be pierced with nails (Ps. xxi. 
17). 



The Apostles' Creed, 169 

Our Lord was really fastened by nails to the cross ; for He showed 
to St. Thomas the wounds in His hands and feet, and told him to 
place his finger in them (John xx. 27). The usual practice was to tie 
condemned criminals to the cross with ropes. 

8. He was to die between two evil-doers. 

The prophet Isaias says : " They shall give the ungodly for His 
burial, and the rich for His death" (Is. liii. 9). He died between 
two highway robbers, who were crucified at the same time with Him 
(Luke xxiii. 33). 

9. He was to be patient as a lamb in His sufferings (Is. liii. 
7), and was to pray for His enemies (Is. liii. 12). 

10. He was to die willingly and for our sins (Is. liii. 4-7). 

7. Of the glory of the Messias the prophets made the follow- 
ing predictions: 

1. He was to make His grave with the rich (Is. liii. 9), and it 
was to be glorious (Is. xi. 10). 

2. His body was not to undergo corruption (Ps. xv. 10). 

3. He was to return to heaven (Ps. Ixvii. 34), and was to sit 
on the right hand of God (Ps. cix. 1). 

4. His doctrine was to spread from Jerusalem and from 
Mount Sion over the whole world (Joel ii. 28; Is. ii. 3). 

The hall of the Last Supper, where the apostles received the Holy 
Ghost, was situated on Mount Sion. 

5. The heathen nations of the whole earth were to be re- 
ceived into His kingdom, and to adore Him (Ps. xxi. 28, 29). 

6. The Jewish people, who had put the Messias to death, 
were to be severelv punished, and scattered over the face of the 
earth (Deut. xxviii. 64). 

The city of Jerusalem was to be destroyed as well as the Temple ; 
the Jewish sacrifices and the Jewish priesthood were to cease, and the 
Temple was never to be rebuilt (Dan. ix. 26, 27 ; Osee iii. 4) . 

7. In every place throughout the world, a " clean oblation " 
(holy Mass) was to be offered to Him (Mai. i. 11). 

8. He will one day judge all men (Ps. cix. 6). Before the 
Day of Judgment Elias will be again sent on the earth (Mai. 
iv. 5). 

8. The Messias was annonnced through many types. 

The twilight announces the approach of the sun; so the lives of 
the patriarchs announced and foreshadowed the coming of Christ. 
Almost all the cerpmonies of the tabernacle foreshadowed the cere- 
inonies of the religion of Christ (Col. ii. 16, 17). The relation of the 
whole of the Old Testament to the ISTew is that of the shadow to the 



170 Faith, 

substance (Heb. x. 1), of the image to the object that it represents. 
The ancient covenant was the veil which concealed the new. The 
persons and things which thus represent in the Old Testament the 
persons and things of the Kew, are called types. 

The types of the Messias were as follows: Abel, l^oe, Mel- 
chisedech, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, Jonas, the arch- 
angel Raphael, the paschal lamb, the offering on the Day of 
Atonement, the brazen serpent, and the manna. 

Abel was the first of just men ; Christ the first of the saints ; Abel 
was a shepherd and offered to God an acceptable offering; he was 
gentle as a lamb, but he was hated by his brother and murdered by 
him. ^oe was the only just man among all those around him ; Christ 
alone was without sin. N^oe amid his course of preaching built the 
ark ; so Christ the Church, ^oe saved the human race from temporal 
death; so Christ from eternal death. ISToe's sacrifice on his quitting 
the ark was the beginning of a new covenant; so Christ's on leaving 
the world. Melchisedech, i.e., king of justice, was King of Salem, i.e., 
King of peace ; Christ was both King and Priest ; He offered to God 
bread and wine. Isaac was the only-begotten and well-beloved 
son of his father. He himself carried the wood on which he was to 
be sacrificed, and offered himself willingly; he was restored to his 
father, and from him sprang a countless offspring. Jacob was perse- 
cuted by his brother, but afterwards was reconciled to him. Though 
the son of a rich father he wandered in a strange land and there 
won his bride by long service ; so Christ the Church. He had twelve 
sons, of whom one was the beloved son ; so Christ had twelve disciples, 
of whom St. John was the beloved disciple. Joseph, the well-beloved 
son of his father, was hated by his brethren, and sold by them for a 
few pieces of silver; after great humiliation he was raised to the 
highest honor, and by his counsel saved the whole people from death. 
Heralds proclaimed that all should bow the knee before him and he 
was reconciled to his brethren. Moses when a little child, escaped the 
cruel command of the king, spent his youth in Egypt, fasted forty 
days before the publication of the ancient law, freed the Israelites 
from slavery, and brought them to the Promised Land, worked mir- 
acles in proof of his divine mission, interceded for the people to God 
(Exod. xxxii. 11 ; iN'umb. xiv. 13) ; appeared on Mount Sinai with a 
shining countenance (as Christ on Thabor), and was the mediator of 
the ancient covenant. David was bom in Bethlehem, spent his youth 
in a humble state, vanquished the giant Goliath, the enemy of the 
people of the Lord; was King of Israel, had much to suffer, and 
triumphed over all his enemies. Jonas was three days and three 
nights in the belly of the whale (Matt. xii. 40), nnd preached penance 
to the ISTinivites. The archangel Raphael came down from heaven to 
conduct safely on his journey one of the children of men; delivered 
Tobias from blindness, and Sara from the devil. The paschal lamb 
was slain just before the departure of the Israelites from Egypt, 
and therefore on the Friday preceding the paschal Sabbath; it was 
offered to God and afterwards eaten; it was to be without spot, 
and in the prime of its age; not a bone of it was to be broken (John 
Xix. 36) ; its blood sprinkled on the posts of the door preserved from 



'ITie Apostles' Creed, 171 

temporal death, as the blood of Christ from spiritual death. It waa 
eaten on the eve of the departure of the Israelites to the Promised 
Land ; so Our Lord is given as Viaticum on our departure for heaven. 
The emissary goat on the day of expiation was presented by the 
high priest before the Lord, and the priest then laid his hands upon 
its head, in order thereby to signify tiiat the sins of all the people 
were transferred to it, and it was then driven out to die in the desert 
(Lev. xvi. 10). So Christ had the sins of the whole world laid upon 
Him, and passed from heaven into the desert of this sinful world 
to die for us. The brazen serpent in the desert was set up on a piece 
of wood, and all who looked upon it were healed of the bite of the 
fiery serpents (Numb. xxi. 6-9). So Christ was raised up on the wood 
of the cross, and all who look to Him with faith and hope are saved 
from the deadly effects of sin. Hence Our Lord says: "As Moses 
lifted up the serpent in the desert, so must the Son of man be 
lifted up, that whoever believeth in Him may not perish, but may 
have life everlasting" (John iii. 14, 15). Lastly the manna is a type 
of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament of the Altar; it was white and 
small, came down from heaven every day, was to be consumed in the 
early morning, was given only during the journey through the desert, 
and contained in itself all sweetness. In all these things it resembles 
the Blessed Sacrament. Our Lord says that there is this difference 
between the manna and the Blessed Sacrament of the Altar: that 
Moses did not give the Israelites bread from heaven, but that the 
Blessed Sacrament is the bread that came down from heaven, and 
giveth life to the world (John vi. 32, 33). 



S, PREPARATION OF MANKIND FOR THE REDEEMER. 

1. God chose for Himself a special nation, and prepared it for 
the coming of a Redeemer; this chosen people was the seed of 
Abraham, usually called by the name of Israelites, or Jews. 

Cf. the call of Abraham (Gen. xii.) ; the Jews to be a priestly 
nation (Exod. xix. 6). No rejection of the other nations is implied in 
this election of the Jews, for every renewal of the promise of a Re- 
deemer recalled a blessing that all the nations were to share (Gen. 
xii. 3; xxvi. 4; xxviii. 14). 

The ways by which God prepared His chosen people for the 
Redeemer's advent were: the infliction of heavy trials, the im- 
position of severe laws, the performance for them of miracles, 
and the giving of a series of prophecies. 

The sensuality of the chosen people had to be combated by many 
trials, such as Pharao's edict against the children, hunger and 
thirst in the desert, the fiery serpents, the attacks of their enemies, 
and their long exile. This same sensuality and insensibility required 
that the law should be promidgated with the awe-inspiring accom- 
paniments of thunder and lightning. Idolatry was another sin to 
which the chosen people were prone, as we see in the incident of the 
golden calf (Exod. xxxii. 1), so miracles were called in to strengthen 



172 Faith. 

their faith and trust in God, such as those performed in Egypt, in 
the passage of the Red Sea and the Jordan, the manna in the desert, 
the water drawn from the dry rock, and the falling down of the walls 
of Jericho, etc. The prophesies tended in the same direction, as well 
as to maintain the desire of the coming Redeemer. 

Of the history of the Jewish people the following facts are 
known to us: 

1. The descendants of Abraham first dwelt in Palestine, and 
went later to Egypt, where they remained for the space of four 
hundred years, and were cruelly oppressed. 

About the year 2000 B.C., God called Abraham and bade him settle 
in Palestine; here he had a son, Isaac, who was the father of Esau 
and Jacob; Jacob secured Esau's birthright and had to fly in conse- 
quence. Jacob (also called Israel) had twelve sons, of whom one was 
Joseph, who being sold into Egypt became the ruler of the land under 
the king, invited his relatives, some sixty-six in number, to join him, 
giving them the fertile district of Goshen, lying eastwards of the Nile 
delta, to dwell in (about 1900 B.C.). Here the Jews increased greatly 
in numbers and had much to endure later from the Egyptian kings. 

2^. Under the leadership of Moses, the Israelites left Egypt 
and wandered in the desert for forty years. 

Some 2,000,000 people crossed the Red Sea (about 1500 B.C.) into 
the Arabian desert, where they were fed with manna and received 
the Ten Commandments. Moses died on Mount Nebo. 

3. Under Josue they entered the Promised Land, but had to 
fight under their Judges for over three hundred years, against 
their enemies (1450-1100 B.C.). 

Josue, the successor of Moses, divided the land among the twelve 
tribes. The Judges were men raised by God for times of special 
need, such, for instance, as Gedeon, Jephte, Samson and Samuel. 

4. The Israelites were then ruled over by kings, Saul, David, 
and Solomon being especially famous (1100-975 B.C.). 

Saul was unhappy in his career and died a suicide. David, his 
successor (1055-1015), was distinguished for his piety; he composed 
many of the Psalms and received from God the promise that the Re- 
deemer should be of his family. On two occasions he fell into 
grievous sin and was visited with severe chastisements. His son and 
successor Solomon built the Temple of Jerusalem (1012), and was 
known far and wide for his wisdom and splendor. 

5. After Solomon's death the kingdom was divided into 
two parts, forming the kingdom of Israel in the north (975-722) 
and Juda in the south (975-588). 

Solomon's son, Roboam, alienated the ten northern tribes by his 
taxations, and only the two southern tribes, Juda and Benjamin, re- 
mained to form the kingdom of Juda. 



TJie Apostles* Creed. 173 

6. Both kingdoms fell away from the true God, and were in 
consequence destroyed, and their inhabitants led away into cap- 
tivity. 

Israel had nineteen kings, who led the people into idolatry in 
spite of the efforts of the prophets. At last, Salmanasar, in 722, de- 
stroyed the kingdom and carried the people away into the Assyrian 
captivity; the fall of the Assyrian power brought the exiles under the 
dominion of the Babylonians and in 538 under that of the Persian 
king Cyrus. The kingdom of Juda had twenty kings, and held out 
longer, but was finally reduced by [N'abuchodonosor ; the people were 
led away into captivity (606 and 599) and Jerusalem and the Temple 
destroyed. 

Y. After the return from the captivity (536) the Jews lived 
in peace until they came, in 203, under the power of Antiochus, 
King of Syria. 

From the year 606 the inhabitants of Juda and Israel dwelt under 
the same ruler, and came to be known indifferently as Jews. Cyrus, 
who obtained possession of the Babylonian kingdom in 538, gave per- 
mission two years later to the Jews to return and rebuild their Tem- 
ple; some 42,000 Jews availed themselves of this concession to return 
under Zorobabel to Jerusalem, where they raised a new Temple after 
twenty years of work; in the year 453 Artaxerxes allowed them to 
build walls; they still remained for about two hundred years under 
Persian dominion and were well treated. Alexander the Great and 
his successors then had the mastery, till the time of Antiochus 
Epiphanes IV., who began a religious persecution, putting the 
Machabean brothers and Eleazar to death, and placing idols in the 
Temple. 

8. The Jews regained their freedom after a bloody war, and 
were again ruled for one hundred years by Jewish kings, from 
140 to 39 B.C. 

Uachabeus and his five sons helped the Jews to shake off the Syrian 
yoke. Simon, one of the Machabees, reigned as high priest and king 
in 140, and was succeeded hj his descendants till the advent of 
Pompey in 64, who reduced the Jewish king to the subjection of 
Rome. 

9. In 38 B.C., a Gentile, Herod, became King of Judea. 

As Judea was always a focus of rebellion, the Jewish king was de- 
posed and replaced by Herod, the first of the kings who was not a 
Jew. He it was who massacred the children at Bethlehem. At his 
death he was succeeded by his son Herod Antipas, who put 
John the Baptist to death and treated Our Lord as a fool. His 
successor was his uncle Herod Agrippa the Great, who beheaded 
St. James the Elder, and cast St. Peter into prison. He usurped 
the name of God and died a miserable death, eaten by worms, 
in 44 A.D. In 70 a.d. Jerusalem was destroyed by Titus, and the Jews 
scattered among the nations. 



174 Faith, 

2. The other nations of the earth were prepared for the coming 
of the Redeemer by contact with the chosen people, or by the in- 
fluence of exceptionally gifted men, or by other extraordinary 
methods. 

The ordinary intercourse of trade, as well as the enforced exile, 
afforded means of contact with the heathen, and that this was not 
unfruitful we learn from Tobias. " Give glory to the Lord, ye chil- 
dren of Israel . . . because He hath therefore scattered you among 
the Gentiles, who know not Him, that you may declare His wonder- 
ful works and make them know that there is no other almighty God 
besides Him " (Tob. xiii. 3, 4). Such men as Socrates, in Greece, had 
their mission in decrying the cult of idols, and exhibiting in their 
persons the virtues of courage, gentleness, and moderation; we might 
enumerate also Job in Arabia, Joseph in Egypt, Jonas in Ninive, 
Daniel in Babylon and others. The virtues of such men, their cour- 
age in confessing the true God, and the miracles by which their pro- 
fession was verified, as, for instance, the cases of the children in the 
furnace of !N'abuchodonosor and Daniel in the lions' den, furnished 
abundant motives to the heathen for discerning the true God; and 
that this was the case is corroborated by the numbers of proselytes. 
Besides all these, other methods were not left untried ; e.g., the mirac- 
ulous star which led the three Magi to Bethlehem (Matt. ii. 2), the 
angel's message to Cornelius the centurion (Acts x. 3), the myste- 
rious handwriting on the wall of the palace where Baltassar was pro- 
faning the sacred vessels (Dan. v. 2), the dream of JSTabuchodonosor 
(Dan. ii.), the prophecy of Balaam's ass, etc. 

3. Before the arrival of the Redeemer God permitted that man- 
kind should experience the deepest misery, in order to rouse it to 
a longing for a Redeemer. 

The greatest dissension reigned among the Jews; three different 
sects claimed precedence: the Sadducees, the moneyed class, denied 
eternal life; the Pharisees adhered rigidly to the written law; the 
Essenes withdrew entirely from the world and led a life of strict 
penance. Among the heathen there was a general ignorance of any 
religious life, together with monstrous immorality. The gods, ac- 
cording to Hesiod, were too numerous to be counted and were indif- 
ferently idols, or men of abominable lives, or even animals, whose 
worship was signalized by scenes of debauchery and human sacrifices ; 
heathens were not wanting who recognized the sad state of affairs; 
Horace, for instance, in one of his odes bewails the civil wars, and 
prays the virgin-born Son to come and reign among His people. 
Long before him Socrates had expressed the wish that some mediator 
should come from heaven to teach man his duty to God. Jacob (Gen. 
xlix. 10) and the prophets (Agg. ii. 8) only echoed the popular feel- 
ing when they called the Redeemer " the expectation of the nations." 
As in nations, so is God's action to be seen in individuals, and the 
struggles of a St. Paul and a St. Augustine served to make them 
more open to the action of the Holy Ghost and more zealous in their 
conversion to God. 



The Apostles' Creed. 175 

4. THE LIFE AND TIMES OF THE REDEEMER, 

1. The Redeemer lived some nineteen hundred years ago and 
remained thirty-three years on the earth. 

In the early Christian times the date was reckoned by the 
consuls of the year. 

From the time of the great Christian persecution under Dio- 
cletian, the Christians began to reckon their years from the accession 
of that tyrant (the era of the martyrs). Dionysius Exiguus, in 525, 
was the first to reckon from the Annunciation of Our Lady, i.e., the 
conception of Christ. Charlemagne introduced the custom of dating 
from the birth of Christ. There is an error, however, of four years, 
so that Christ was actually born four years before the year 1 of the 
Christian era. 

The time preceding Christ is known as that of the Old Tes- 
tament or the Old Law, that following as the 'New Testament or 
New Law (Heb. ix. 15-lY). 

The word testament is appropriate as expressing the will of God, 
recalling the legacy of the Promised Land to the Jews, and to Chris- 
tians, the one sealed with the blood of animals, the other with the 
blood of Christ. 

2. The work of the Redeemer was confined for the most part 
to Palestine. 

Palestine is the ancient Chanaan, known later as Judea or the 
" land of promise " or the " holy land," made holy by the presence of 
Christ. Its small extent (it was only about half the size of Switzer- 
land) had many counterbalancing advantages; its central position 
adapted it for the spreading of the true religion, its fertility in the 
midst of the surrounding desert made it independent of other nations, 
and secured its inhabitants from undesirable intercourse with the 
heathen. The population in the time of Our Lord was about 5,000,- 
000, of whom 1,000,000 lived at Jerusalem. At the present day the 
whole population is only half a million, and in Jerusalem hardly 
25,000. 

Palestine is situated on the Mediterranean, and includes both 
banks of the Jordan. 

The boundaries of Palestine are : Phcenicia on the north, the desert 
on the east, Arabia on the south, and the Mediterranean on the 
west. The Jordan, a river varying from eighty to one hundred 
and fifty feet in width, the scene of the passage of the Jews and 
the baptism of Our Lord, flows in a turbid, yellow current, and 
passes through the little lake of Merom and the lake of Genesareth, 
the scene of so many of Christ's labors, and finally into the Dead 
Sea, the site of Sodom and Gomorrha. On its way it receives the 
brooks Karith and Cedron. 

The divisions of Palestine are: in the south, Judea;. in the 



176 Faith. 

centre, Samaria; in the north, Galilee, and in the east, beyond 
the Jordan, Persea, Itursea, and the district of Trachonitis. 

The inhabitants of Judea were the firmest adherents of the true 
faith; those of Samaria had given themselves up to the worship of 
idols, and the Galileans, especially in the north, were in part pagans, 
despised by the Jews as well on that account as for their uncouth 
dialect. 

The most important city of Palestine was Jerusalem, where 
the Temple stood. 

Jerusalem (i.e.. City of Peace), is situate on four hills, of which 
the highest is Sion, lying westward of the hill of Acre, with the pool 
of Siloe lying south; to the north is Mount Moriah, on which the 
Temple stood, and further still to the north is the hill of Bezetha and 
the modern town. Westward of Moriah is Golgotha or Calvary. 
These hills lie between two valleys, of which the westward is called 
Hinnom (or hell, because there the Jews used to sacrifice their chil- 
dren to Moloch), and the eastern, the valley of Josaphat (or judgment 
of God, on account of the tradition that God would judge the world 
there). To the east of the valley of Josaphat is the Mount of Olives 
and the Garden of Gethsemani. Jerusalem was in existence at the 
time of Melchisedech, who reigned there about 2000 B.C.; it became, 
under David (about 1000 B.C.), the residence of the Jewish kings; 
about four hundred years later (in 588 B.C.) it was destroyed by 
Nabuchodonosor, restored again about fifty years later (536 B.C.), and 
again destroyed by the Romans under Titus in the year 70 a.d. The 
Temple in Our Lord's time was a magnificent and imposing building 
(Cf. Mark xiii. 1) of white stone; it had an outer court, the court 
of the Gentiles, and an inner, the court of the priests, containing the 
altar of burnt offerings. Within this court again was the Temple 
proper, a building of about thirty metres in length, ten in breadth, 
and fifteen in height, with a flat roof of cedar. The Temple proper 
consisted of the vestibule, the holy place, and the holy of holies ; the 
walls of the two last places were covered with solid plates of gold 
and the two chambers were separated by a veil, the veil of the Temple. 
In the holy of holies, between two great golden cherubim, lay the ark 
of the covenant containing the tables of the law, Aaron's staff, and 
the manna; and here in a cloud rested the majesty of God, the 
Shechinah. The Temple was built by Solomon about 1000 B.C., 
was destroyed by Nabuchodonosor in 588 B.C., and in 516 was rebuilt 
by Zorobabel on the return from the Babylonian exile (though the 
ark was no longer there), and was restored again by Herod in the 
time of Christ. In the year 64 a.d., the restoration was complete, till 
the Romans came in 70 a.d., and destroyed the building. Julian the 
Apostate endeavored to rebuild it in 361, but an earthquake cast down 
the works, and fire coming from the earth drove away the workmen. 
The Temple will never be rebuilt till the end of the world (Dan. ix. 
27). 

Besides Jerusalem the towns of Bethlehem and ITazareth de- 
serve mention. 



The Apostles' Creed, 177 

Places of interest in Judea: South of Jerusalem lies Bethlehem, 
i^^he birthplace of Christ; further south still is Hebron, where dwelt 
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the parents of St. John the Baptist; 
east of Jerusalem is Bethany, the village where Lazarus dwelt, and 
the desert of Quarantania, where Our Lord went through His forty- 
days' fast. ISTortheast of Jerusalem is Jericho, the city of palms, the 
abode of Zacheus, the penitent tax-gatherer; north of Jerusalem is 
Emmaus, where Our Lord appeared to His two disciples after the 
resurrection; on the seacoast is Joppe, famous in the annals of the 
crusades, where Peter restored Tabitha to life and was summoned to 
receive the Gentile centurion, Cornelius ; further to the south and ex- 
tending along the coast is the district which was formerly the land of 
the Philistines, with its towns of Gaza and Ascalon; westward of the 
Dead Sea is the desert of Inda, otherwise called the desert of St. 
John. Places of interest in Samaria: The capital Samaria is situ- 
ated near the centre of the district; south of it is Jacob's well, near 
Sicham, where Our Lord spoke with the Samaritan woman; eastward 
is Garizim, where the Samaritans had a temple dedicated to the serv- 
ice of idols; in the south is Siloe, where from the time of Josue, 
the tables of the law were kept for over three hundred and fifty years ; 
along the coast of the Mediterranean stretches the fertile plain of 
Sharon; by the sea is situated Csesarea, the residence of the gover- 
nors. In the northwest, close by the sea and on the boundary, is 
Mount Carmel, rising some thousand feet, its fertility, beauty, and 
nmnerous caves making it peculiarly adapted to the wants of the her- 
mits who dwelt there ; it was the scene of the sacrifice of Elias and of 
the priests of Baal. Places of interest in Galilee: ITazareth, or the 
city of flowers, the residence of the Mother of God at the time of the 
Annunciation, and of Christ till His thirtieth year. South of it is 
Mount Thabor, where the transfiguration took place, and ISTaim, 
where Christ restored the young man to life. East of ITazareth is 
Cana, where Christ performed His first miracle at the wedding-feast. 
On the lake of Genesareth are situated : Capharnaum, " Christ's own 
city," in which He dwelt and where He worked so many miracles, 
e.g., the cure of the centurion's son, and the raising of the daughter 
of Jairus; here, too, He promised the institution of the Blessed 
Sacrament and called the apostle Matthew ; to the south is Bethsaida, 
whence came the apostles Andrew and Philip; then comes Magdala, 
the dwelling-place of the sinner Magdalen; Tiberias is also a town 
on this lake. In the north of Galilee is Csesarea Philippi, where 
Peter received the power of the keys. Quite beyond the boundaries 
of Galilee, in Phoenicia, on the coast, are the two cities of Tyre and 
Sidon, more than once visited by Christ. On the borders of Galilee 
is the range of the Lebanon, ascending to 10,000 feet, and covered 
with perpetual snow; not more than three hundred cedars remain 
of its once famous forest; to the east is Hermon, rising about 9500 
feet; and stili further east is Damascus, in the neighborhood of 
which St. Paul was converted. Places of interest in Peraea : Close by 
the Dead Sea, Pnd eastward of the mouth of the Jen-dan, near to Beth- 
nbara is the place where St. John baptized; here he pointed out 
Christ and called Him the Lamb of God ; further to the east is Mount 
Nebo, on which Moses died; south of the lake of Genesareth is Pella, 



178 Faith. 

the refuge of tlie Christians during the siege of Jerusalem in the 
year 70 a.d, 

5. JE8U8 OF NAZARETH IS THE REDEEMER OR 

CHRIST. 

The Jews called the coming Redeemer the Messias (in Hebrew), 
or the Christ (in Greek), i.e., the Anointed One. The " anointed 
of the Lord" was the usual epithet among the Jews for prophets, 
high priests, and kings, because they were anointed in sign of their 
mission on their appointment to office, and this anointing symbol- 
ized the light and strength of the Holy Ghost, and reminded them of 
the duty of clemency. The coming Messias was to be prophet, priest, 
and king, all in one, and the greatest of them all, hence it was usual 
to call Him simply, " the anointed of the Lord," This unction of the 
Messias was not a physical, exterior act, but the interior dwelling of 
the Holy Spirit (Ps. xliv. 8; Acts x. 38). 

1. Jesus of Nazareth is the Redeemer, because all the proph- 
ecies have their fulfilment in Him. 

Jesus often appealed to this circumstance (John v. 39; Luke 
xviii. 31), especially in His conversation with the two disciples on 
the way to Emmaus (Luke xxiv. 26). St. Matthew points out in his 
gospel how the prophecies are fulfilled in Christ. Many Jews have 
been converted on comparing the life of Christ with the prophecies. 

2. Jesus of Nazareth is the Messias, because the kingdom 
founded by Him on earth has been enduring. 

The success of many of those who claimed to be the Messias has 
ever been merely temporary; but Jesus of JN^azareth has had His fol- 
lowers in every age. Had His kingdom, the Church, been the work of 
men, it would have been destroyed long ago. That it has survived, 
in spite, too, of so much persecution, is a proof that it is God's work, 
and that its founder must be the heaven-sent Messias (Cf , the words 
of Gamaliel, Acts v. 38). 

3. Jesus Himself claimed the name of Redeemer. 

On the occasion of His conversation with the Samaritan 
woman, and in presence of the high priest Caiphas. 

The Samaritan woman said to Christ at the well: "I know that 
the Messias cometh Who is called Christ," and Christ replied : " I am 
He Who am speaking with thee" (John iv. 25, 26). The high priest 
Caiphas said to Christ : " I adjure Thee by the living God that Thou 
tell us if Thou be Christ the Son of God," and Christ answered: 
"Thou hast said it" (Matt. xxvi. 64). On another occasion St. 
Peter was commended for calling Him " the Christ, the Son of the 
living God " (Matt. xvi. 16). 

4. The angels announced Him as the Redeemer. 

When they appeared to the shepherds near Bethlehem, and 
in St. Joseph's vision. 



The Apostles' Creed. 179 

An angel stood by the shepherds and said : " Fear not, for behold 
I bring you good tidings of great joy that shall be to all the people; 
for this day is born to you a Saviour, Who is Christ the Lord " 
(Luke ii. 10). WTien St. Joseph was thinking of dismissing our 
blessed Lady, an angel appeared to him in sleep and announced the 
birth of Christ : " Thou shalt call His name Jesus, for He shall 
save His people from their sins" (Matt. i. 21). Since Jesus of 
Nazareth is the Christ or Messias, He is called Jesus Christ, and this 
is the name He Himself uses in John xvii. 3. 



6. TEE LIFE OF CHRIST. 

The Childhood of Christ. 

The birth of Christ was announced by the archangel Gabriel 
to the Blessed Virgin Mary at Nazareth (Luke i. 28). 

This event is commemorated by the feast of the Annunciation, 
which is kept on the twenty-fifth of March, by the Angelus, and in 
the first words of the Hail Mary. After the angel's salutation Our 
Lady set out to visit her cousin, St. Elizabeth, who greeted her with 
the words contained in the second part of the Llail Mary, and Our 
Lady replied in the solemn words of the Magnificat (Luke i.). The 
visitation is kept on the second of July, immediately after the 
octave of the nativity of St. John Baptist. St. Joseph also was 
warned of the birth of Christ by an angel (Matt. i. 18-25), when 
debating on the advisability of putting away Our Lady. 

1. Christ was born of the Blessed Virgin Mary in a stable 
at Bethlehem. 

Mary and Joseph had to repair to their native place of Bethlehem 
to be enrolled in the census which was being held by command of the 
Emperor Augustus. They were obliged to seek refuge in a stable, 
because there was no room for them in Bethlehem (Luke ii. 7). As 
in the conception, so in the birth of Christ, was exception made to 
the ordinary course of nature. Mary was free from the penalties 
described in Gen. iii. 16, because, as St. Bernard says, she alone had 
conceived without carnal pleasure. St. Augustine exclaims : " Behold 
He Who rules the world lies in a manger. He Who feeds the angels 
is suckled by His Mother. Strength becomes weak, that weakness 
may be made strong ;" and again, " A great Physician came down 
from heaven to heal a great disease on earth; He healed in a 
way hitherto unheard of, for He took our ills on Himself." " Being 
rich He became poor, that through His poverty we might be made 
rich" (2 Cor. viii. 9). Every circumstance attending the birth of 
Christ has a deep meaning. Christ was born at Bethlehem (the 
house of bread) because, as St. Jerome says. He is the living bread. 
He is born far away from His home in Nazareth because He de- 
scended from heaven, His true home, and is a stranger among men. 
He is born amid the shepherds and their flocks, because He is to be 
the " Good Shepherd " (John x. 11) of a great flock. He is born in a 
stable, because the earth in comparison of heaven is but a stable. 



180 Faith. 

He is bom not in a house, but in a stable, that all might have con- 
fidence and approach Him, says St. Peter Chrysologus. He is bom 
in obscurity, because He is the " hidden God " (Is. xlv. 15), Whom we 
cannot see in this life, and Who loves good deeds done in secret. He 
is laid in a manger, where cattle feed, because He was to be the 
food of man ; and He is laid on the wood to recall to us that He came 
down from heaven to die on the cross. So too He dwells in our tab- 
ernacles. He is born at midnight, because the greater portion of man- 
kind was buried in darkness, and knew nothing of the true God. He 
is born in the winter season, and at night (notice that the nights in 
Palestine are particularly cold), because the hearts of men were cold, 
unwarmed yet with the fire of charity. Christ drops from heaven in 
the night time like the dew (Cf. Is. xlv. 8), to refresh the hearts of 
men. At the time of His birth the temple of Janus in Home was closed, 
and there was peace over all the earth, because Christ was the Prince 
of peace (Is. ix. 6) ; and the God of peace (1 Cor. xiv. 33), i.e.. Our 
Lord, came as a little child that man might approach Him with more 
confidence; had He come as a great king, men would have shrunk 
away, while as a child He invited, not awe, but sympathy. Christ 
comes in poverty and renunciation to teach us that the road to 
heaven is the way of suffering and self-conquest, not of pleasure and 
self-indulgence. Besides this He would show that He is the Friend 
of the poor to whom He is appointed to preach the Gospel (Luke iv. 
18). A light appeared to the shepherds to remind us that the Light 
of the world is come (John viii. 12), Who is to shine in the midst of 
the darkness (John i. 5). The hymn of the angels is the keynote of 
His mission, to glorify God (John xiii. 32), and to give peace to men 
(John xiv. 27), especially peace with God, reconciling man to God by 
His death on the cross, peace with self, the true peace which comes 
from the knowledge and practice of the Gospel, and peace with the 
neighbor by the virtues of brotherly love, love of one's enemy, and 
m.eekness. He announced His birth by the voice of an angel to the 
shepherds, and not to the proud Pharisees and Scribes, because He 
would hide His mysteries from the wise and prudent and reveal them 
to the little ones (Matt. xi. 25) ; because He gives His graces to the 
humble and resists the proud (1 Pet. v. 5). Such, too, is the disposi- 
tion of God's providence in all time; to the proud, whatever their 
learning, the teachings of Christ are a sealed book, while the lowly 
and humble receive God's light. The first to receive the call to the 
crib were the Jews in the person of the shepherds, and after them 
the Gentiles, in the persons of the three kings ; all to signify that 
Christ would first call into His Church the Jews (Matt. xv. 24), and 
afterwards the Gentiles by means of His apostles. The wonderful 
star in the East was to announce that Christ " the wonderful " (Is. 
ix. 6) had come down from heaven. The census of the people at the 
time of His birth reminds us of the great enrolment which will take 
place at His second coming. " Christ begins to teach us in His birth 
even before uttering a word." " The deeds of the Lord are com- 
mands ; if He does anything in silence, He means that we should imi- 
tate Him," is the comment of St. Gregory the Great. 

In the liturgy of the Church we celebrate Our Lord's birth on the 
twenty-fifth of December (Christmas Day). On that day every priest 



The Apostles' Creed, 181 

has the privilege of saying three Masses, which recall the threefold 
birth of Christ : the eternal birth from God the Father, the birth in 
time from the womb of Mary, and His spiritual birth in our hearts. 
A crib is generally erected in most churches, a practice originated 
by St. Francis of Assisi. In many households there is kept up the 
custom of the Christmas-tree, a reminder of the fatal tree of para- 
dise, and also of the tree of the cross. The Christmas-boxes recall to 
our minds the gifts of God the Father to mankind on this day. Im- 
mediately following Christmas are the feasts of St. Stephen, St. 
John, and the Holy Innocents, as though the Church would say : " If 
you would follow Christ, you must become a martyr like St. Stephen, 
if not to the shedding of blood, at least to the denial of self and the 
bearing of suffering. You must love God and your neighbor like St. 
John, and do works of mercy; and finally you must be like a child 
with God." 

The new-born Child is adored first bj the shepherds and 
then by the Magi. 

The shepherds were told by an angel of the birth of the Saviour 
(Luke ii. 9) ; the three kings were led to Him by a star (Matt. ii. 9). 
This star was something exceptional, for it had a proper motion of 
its own in the heavens; according to St. John Chrysostom, it may 
have been an angel, under the appearance of a star. Catherine Em- 
merich, in her revelations, says that this star had various aspects; 
at times it appeared as a child carrying a cross, or a woman with a 
child ; again as a chalice with grapes and wheat ornamenting it, as a 
church, or forming the word Judea, etc. St. Irenseus remarks that 
the presents indicated their esteem of Him to Whom the three kings 
offered them. Gold, the s;>Tiibol of homage, is offered to Him as 
King; incense, the sjTnbol of prayer, because He is God; and myrrh, 
the symbol of mortification, because as Our Redeemer, He was to 
suffer. The Magi returned to their homes by another way, " to 
show us," says St. Gregory the Great, " that if we wish to reach our 
true home in paradise we must forsake the path in which we have 
hitherto walked, and tread in the way of penance, obedience, and 
self-denial." The shepherds represented the Jews and the poor; the 
three kings the Gentiles and the rich. The relics of the three kings 
were taken from the East to Cologne in 1162 by Barbarossa, and now 
repose in the Cathedral there. The feast of the three kings is held 
on the sixth of January. In many countries there still exists the cus- 
tom of blessing on this day the water of the three kings, and the 
blessing of chalk and salt is not unusual. The initials of the names 
of the three kings are sometimes marked on the doors of houses to 
claim their patronage. This feast is called also the Epiphany, be- 
cause in former times the birth of Christ, or appearance of Christ 
to mankind, was celebrated on this day. Hence in the Greek Church 
the season of Advent is prolonged till the Epiphany. This day is 
also celebrated as the one on which Christ was baptized in the Jor- 
dan, and performed His first miracle at Cana. 

"When the Child was eii^ht days old He was circumcised, and 
received the name Jesus (Luke ii. 21). 



182 Faith. 

Jesus (in Hebrew Joshua or Josue) means Saviour. This name 
is, as St. Paul says, above all names (Phil. ii. 9), for it was chosen by 
God Himself and revealed to the Virgin Mary (Matt. i. 21). More- 
over the holy name has great virtue; its invocation brings help in 
temptation and affliction; the powers of hell shrink from it (Mark 
xvi. 17). The name usually given by the prophets was Emmanuel, 
i.e., "God with us" (Is. vii. 14). The feast of the Circumcision on 
the first of January is also JS^ew Year's Day. The Church would thus 
teach us to begin everything in the name of Jesus. Innocent XII., 
in 1691, was the first to order the practice of beginning the New Year 
on the first of January; previously it had been Christmas Day. It is 
a pious custom in many places to have a solemn thanksgiving service 
and to sing the Te Deum on the last day of the year, in thanksgiving 
for past favors. 

When the Child was forty days old, He was presented in the 
Temple (Luke ii. 39). 

Mary complied with the law of Moses (Lev. xii.), though, being 
free from sin, she needed no purificatian. The feast of the Purifica- 
tion is called also Candlemas; on that day candles are blessed, and 
carried in procession in memory of these words of holy Simeon call- 
ing Our Lord the " light for the revelation of the Gentiles " (Luke ii. 
32). 

2. Christ spent the first years of His childhood in Egypt, and 
after that lived at Nazareth till He was thirty. 

An angel told Joseph to fly because Herod was seeking to kill the 
Child (Matt. ii. 13). After the escape of Our Lord Herod put to 
death all the children in Bethlehem under two years of age. This 
was a judgment on the people of Bethlehem for their refusal of hospi- 
tality to the Holy Family; the little children themselves gained by 
their death the joys of heaven. In Egypt there is still to be seen the 
dwelling-place of the Holy Family in a suburb of Cairo, the ancient 
Heliopolis. The land so sanctified by the presence of Our Lord be- 
came later the abode of thousands of monks, who led lives like to 
those of the angels; men such as, for instance, St. Anthony and St. 
Paul of Thebes ; here St. Pachomius founded the first monastery, on 
an island of the Nile. After His return from Egypt Christ went to 
live in Nazareth, a place of little esteem among the Jews, therefore 
useful in teaching us the lesson of humility; and for thirty years He 
stayed there that we might learn from Him the lesson of detachment 
from the world. 

When Christ was twelve years old He went up to the Temple 
in Jerusalem. 

It was on this occasion that He made the doctors of the law 
marvel at His wisdom (Luke ii. 47). 

When Christ was grown up John the Baptist began to preach 
His coming in the desert. 

We have the following facts about John the Baptist. The arch- 



The Apostles' Creed, 183 

angel Gabriel announced his approaching birth to Zachary at the 
hour of sacrifice in the Temple ; and when the latter was incredulous 
he was struck dumb (Lulve i.), regaining his speech at the birth of St. 
John and using it to proclaim the noble canticle of the Benedictus 
(Luke i. 68-79). St. John spent his life in the desert in penance and 
preparation for his office as forerunner of the Kedeemer. When 
Christ had reached His twenty-eighth year (Luke iii. 1), the Baptist 
came from his solitude, and preached to the Jews who flocked to him 
on the banks of the Jordan, the doctrine of penance and baptism 
(Matt. iii.). It was he who pointed out Christ : " Behold the Lamb of 
God Who taketh away the sins of the world " (John i. 29). His cour- 
ageous rebuke to Herod caused him to be cast into prison (Matt. xiv. 
4), and later to be beheaded (Matt. xiv. 10). He, like Elias, is the 
forerunner and the type of hermit life. 

The Public Life of Christ. 

1. When Christ was thirty years old, He was baptized by John 
in the Jordan (Matt. iii. 13), and fasted forty days in the desert, 
where He was tempted by the devil (Matt. iv.). 

All apostolic men have sought retirement before entering on their 
mission, e.g., Moses, John the Baptist, and the apostles before the 
coming of the Holy Spirit. By His fasting and His victory over the 
devil Christ would satisfy for Adam's self-indulgence and defeat in 
the garden of paradise. The number forty hns a special signifi- 
cance; it rained forty days on earth at the Flood, Moses and Elias 
fasted forty days, the Ninivites had forty days in which to repent, 
Christ dwelt on earth forty days after His resurrection, the Jews 
wandered forty years in the desert. The forty days of Lent are in- 
tended to commemorate the fasting of Christ; they begin with Ash- 
Wednesday and continue till Easter. During this time those who are 
of age should take only one full meal a day, and all Christians should 
avoid boisterous amusements and meditate on the sufferings of 
Christ. Thus sermons are preached on the sufferings of Christ; on 
Passion Sunday the images in the church are veiled and the priest 
says Mass in purple vestments. The three days before Ash Wednes- 
day are called Shrovetide, and in order to divert the faithful from 
vicious pleasures it is usual in some places to have Exposition of 
the Blessed Sacrament. 

2. Christ taught for about three and a half years, gathered 
some seventy-two disciples, and from these chose twelve apostles. 

His first miracle was at the wedding-feast of Cana, to teach man- 
kind that the heaven to which He would lead us is a wedding-feast 
(Matt. xxii. 2). He often addressed large crowds, counting four or 
five thousand, as in the case of the miraculous multiplication of 
loaves; thus Zacheus had to climb a tree in order to see Him among 
the crowd. The constant companions of Christ were the apostles and 
disciples, who heard His words and saw His deeds and published 
them later to the world. The bishops of the Church are prefigured in 
the apostles, and the priests in the seventy-two disciples. The teach- 
ing of Christ is rightly called Evangelium, " good tidings," or by oui- 



184 Faith, 

English name Gospel, i.e., God's spell or narrative. Christ is the 
Master among teachers. He taught as one having power, so that the 
people marvelled at His doctrine (Mark i. 22; Matt. vii. 29). 

Christ taught so that all might understand Him without 
difficulty; He used plain, homely words, and illustrated His 
teaching with signs and parables and by references to natural ob- 
jects. 

Christ's teaching is likened to the treasure buried in a field 
(Matt. xiii. 44). The language of apostolic men has always been 
simple, their object not so much to please as to be understood 
and to be useful. The signs which Christ made use of were breathing 
on the apostles when He gave them the Holy Spirit, lifting up His 
hands (Luke xxiv. 50) when He gave them power to teach and bap- 
tize, spitting on the earth and making clay, with which He touched 
the eyes of the man born blind (John ix. 6), and sending him to wash 
in the pool of Siloe. All this signified that the living doctrine which 
is imparted to man, the creature of earth, from the mouth of God, 
is to clear his spiritual sight, and even after that the washing of 
baptism is still necessary. The parables used were, for example, the 
prodigal son, the Good Samaritan, Dives and Lazarus, the wise and 
foolish virgins, the good shepherd, the lost sheep, the lost groat, the 
fig tree, the laborers in the vineyard, etc., and the seven figures of the 
kingdom of heaven, such as the pearl of great price, the buried treas- 
ure, the seine, the grain of mustard-seed, the cockle and wheat, the 
sower, the leaven. The objects in nature on which He drew for illus- 
tration were, among others, the shepherd with his sheep, the lilies of 
the field, the crops, the vineyards, etc. It is only reasonable that 
nature and religion should have many resemblances, coming as they 
do from the same God. 

The poor were the especial objects of Christ's mission. 

His own words to the disciples of John were : " The poor have 
the Gospel preached to them" (Matt. xi. 5). And in the synagogue 
at Nazareth He applied to Himself as the Messias (Luke iv. 18), the 
words of the prophet : " to preach the Gospel to the poor He hath sent 
Me." 

The leading idea in the teaching of Christ was : " Seek the 
kingdom of God." 

His own words in the Sermon on the Mount were : " Seek first the 
kingdom of God" (Matt. vi. 33). The Evangelists sum up His 
teaching in the words : " Do penance and believe the Gospel, for the 
kingdom of heaven is nigh" (Matt. iv. 17; Mark i. 15). 

Christ taught a new rule of faith, gave new commandments, 
and established a new system of means of grace. 

For example He taught the mystery of the Blessed Trinity, His 
own divinity, the Last Judgment; He gave the two precepts of love, 
and extended the Ten Commandments (forbidding rash anger and 
harsh word'^). He instituted the Mass and the seven sacraments and 
taught us the Our Father. 



TJie Apostles' Greed. 185 

3. Christ proved His divine mission and the truth of His doc- 
trine by many miracles, by His knowledge of all things, and by the 
holiness of His life. 

Christ Himself appealed to His miracles : " Though you will 
not believe Me, believe the works" (John x. 38). Nicodemus was 
convinced of the divine mission of Christ by His miracles : " jSTo man 
can do these signs which Thou dost, unless God be with Him " (John 
iii. 2). Christ of His own power worked miracles; others in the 
name of God or of Christ. Christ knew all things — the most hidden 
sins of men, those of the Samaritan woman, those of the Pharisees 
who dragged before Him the woman taken in adaltery; He knew of 
Judas' plot against Himself, of Peter's coming denial, and related 
many incidents of His Passion just as they afterwards happened. 
We see in Christ the highest holiness; never were seen before or 
since, such patience, gentleness, love, etc. How could such a one say 
anything but the truth ? 

The Scribes and Pharisees hated and persecuted Him be- 
cause He failed to realize their carnal views of the Messias, 
and because He publicly rebuked their sins; after the raising of 
Lazarus they resolved to seek His death. 

They tried to stone Him in the Temple (John x. 31), and at Naz- 
areth to cast Him over the cliff ; they calumniated Him, calling Him 
an agent of the devil (Matt. xii. 24), a leader of revolt, a Sabbath- 
breaker; they tried to catch Him in His speech, as in the case of 
Caesar's coin. The Jews thought that the Messias was to be an 
earthly being, who would free them from the Eoman yoke, and raise 
them above the nations of the earth. Instead of which He came in 
poverty and lowliness and taught self-denial, mercy, etc. Besides 
He accused the Pharisees of hypocrisy, calling them whitened sepul- 
chres (Matt, xxiii. 27), and children of the devil (John viii. 44). 

The Sufferings of Christ. 

1. On the Sunday preceding the feast of Easter Christ made 
a solemn entry into Jerusalem and taught in the Temple during 
the days following. 

The Church celebrates this solemn entry by the blessing of 
palms and the procession on Palm Sunday. In the course of the 
High Mass the history of the Passion as related by St. Matthew is 
read by the celebrant and sung by the choir. During the blessing of 
the palms the priest prays that God may preserve from sin and 
danger those who receive these palms and keep them in their houses. 
The week following Palm Sunday is called Holy Week. 

2. On Holy Thursday evening Christ ate the Pasch with His 
disciples, instituted the Blessed Sacrament, and then went out to 
the Mount of Olives, where He suffered His agony and bloody 
sweat. 

Before the institution of the Blessed Sacrament He washed the 



186 Faith. 

feet of His apostles to teach us humility. His conduct in the 
Garden of Gethsemani was a lesson of humble prayer, conformity to 
God's will, and patience under sulfering. In the words of St. Am- 
brose : " The Lord took my griefs on Him that He might share His 
joys with me." In many places it is the custom to ring a bell at eight 
o'clock in the evening to recall the agony in the garden. The follow- 
ing ceremonies are in more general use: The Pope washes the 
feet of twelve priests — a practice kept up since the time of Greg- 
ory the Great. The bishops and governors in many places wash the 
feet of twelve old men. Dui'ing the Gloria in the High Mass all the 
bells are rung, and the priests and laity go to communion to com- 
memorate the institution of the Blessed Sacrament. The procession 
of the Blessed Sacrament to the altar of repose is to recall Our 
Lord's journey to the Mount of Olives. The stripping of the altars 
and the silence of the bells are signs of the Church's sympathy with 
her Saviour. The blessing of the oils which takes place in the Cathe- 
dral churches, which is of ancient institution, suggests that Christ 
may have instituted some of the sacraments at the Last Supper. 

Christ was seized by the soldiers in the garden, led before the 
high priest, and condemned to death. 

On the Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday of Holy Week, Tenehrof 
is celebrated in the evening. On a triangular frame in front of the 
altar there are placed fourteen candles of unbleached wax, and at the 
upper angle one of white wax ; the white candle represents Our Lord 
and the unbleached candles His apostles and disciples. At each of 
the antiphones which recur at intervals during the recital of the 
psalms, a candle is extinguished to represent the flight of the disciples 
after the capture of Our Lord. At the end of the service the white 
candle is hidden for a time behind the altar, a noise is made, and the 
candle replaced on the stand; all signifying the death and resurrec- 
tion of Our Lord with the accompanying convulsions of nature. 

From the court of the high priest Christ was led by the Jews 
before Pontius Pilate, to receive the ratification of the death- 
sentence. 

The Jews had no power to put any one to death, so they were 
obliged to have recourse to the Roman governor (John xviii. 31). 
Pilate could see no reason for condemning Christ, and made several 
attempts to set Him at liberty; he sent Him to Herod and offered 
to give up Barabbas in exchange ; to enlist the sympathy of the Jews, 
he caused Our Lord to be scourged and crowned with thorns and in 
that state to be presented to the crowd, but they clamored only the 
more for the blood of Jesus, and threatened to accuse Pilate to the 
emperor. 

Pilate, alarmed by the threats of the Jews, condemned Our 
Lord to the death of the cross. 

The devotion of the Stations of the Cross commemorates all these 
details of the Passion. The distance to Calvary was some thirteen 
hundred paces. 



The Apostles' Creed. 187 

3. On Good Friday at noon, Christ was nailed to the cross on 
the hill of Calvary, just outside Jerusalem, and died on the cross 
about three o'clock. 

Cicero is our authority that crucifixion was at that time the most 
shameful and terrible of deaths, to which none but the greatest crim- 
inals were subjected. Hence the doctrine of the Crucified was a 
scandal to the Jews and folly to the heathen (1 Cor. i. 23). Yet to- 
day the cross is the badge of honor, worn in the crowns of kings, 
and on the breasts of men proud of the decoration. In the words of 
St. Athanasius sin was repaired on the tree where sin was com- 
mitted; and where death began there life arose, as the Church sings 
in the preface of the Mass. Christ was not beheaded, nor His body 
dismembered; so are we taught that His mystical body, the Church, 
should remain ever undivided. Christ bent His head to kiss us, 
spread His arms to embrace us, and opened His Heart to love us (St. 
Augustine). The Heart of Jesus was opened that its wounds might 
reveal to us the hidden wounds of His love for us (St. Bernard). It 
was not the soldiers, but His love for us, which nailed Christ to the 
cross (St. Augustine). 

During these three hours the sun was darkened over the 
earth, though an eclipse was impossible at the time of the full 
moon. 

As St. John Chrysostom says, the sun hid his rays that he might 
not behold the sufferings of his Maker. This darkening of the sun 
is mentioned by heathen writers. 

At the death of Christ the earth opened, the rocks split, the 
voil of the Temple was rent, and many of the dead arose and ap- 
peared in Jerusalem. 

All creation was in sympathy with Christ, excepting man, for 
whom Christ was suffering (St. Jerome). These marvels caused 
many to acknowledge the Godhead of Christ, as in the case of the 
centurion, who exclaimed : " Indeed, this was the Son of God ! " (Matt, 
xxvii. 54.) One may still see on Calvary a rent in the rock between 
the site of Our Lord's cross and that of the thief on His left. 

Christ spoke on the cross the seven last words. 

These words were: (1). "Father, forgive them." (2). "To-day 
thou shalt be with Me in paradise." (3). "Behold thy Mother." 
(4). "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me!" (5). "I 
thirst." (6). " It is consummated." (7). " Father, into Thy hands 
I commend My spirit." The great cry which Christ gave before His 
death was a sign that He gave up His life of His own free will, and 
that He had strength enough to go on living. The cross, as St. 
Augustine says, is no longer the instrument of Christ suffering, but 
the pulpit of Christ preaching ; from it He teaches the lessons of love 
of our enemies, gentleness, patience, obedience, God's mercy, goodness, 
justice and power, the immortality of the soul, the Last Judgment 
and the resurrection. In many churches it is the custom to toll the 
bells at three o'clock on Fridays in memory of Christ's death; and 



188 Faith. 

since Christ crucified His flesh for our sins on that day the Church 
has forbidden the eating of flesh meat. On Friday of Holy Week the 
Church is in mourning : the altars are stripped, the lights put out, and 
the bells silenced, and the sacred ministers in their black vestments 
lie prostrate at the foot of the altar. The celebrant prays for all 
conditions of men, even for heathens and Jews, since Christ died on 
this day for all men. The crucifix is unveiled. Then the celebrant 
lays it on the ground and kisses the feet of the image, and the people 
come up in turn to offer the same homage. On Good Friday there is 
no Mass, properly so called, but the ceremonies are gone through with 
a Host consecrated for the purpose on the preceding day. An altar 
of repose (or sepulchre) is chosen in the church where the Host is 
kept in the interval. 

In the evening Our Lord's body was taken down from the 
cross and laid in the grave which belonged to Joseph of Arima- 
thea. 

4. During Easter Saturday, that is, on the greatest feast day 
of the Jews, Our Lord remained in the sepulchre. 

On Holy Saturday fire is struck from a flint, and blessed outside 
the church doors, and from this fire the triple candle, the paschal 
candle, and the sanctuary lamp are lit. Each branch of the triple 
candle is lit separately, one at the door, another in the middle of the 
church, and the third in front of the high altar, to represent the 
gradual development of the knowledge of the Blessed Trinity. The 
paschal candle is also blessed on this day, and the five grains of in- 
cense imbedded in it remind us of the wounds of Christ. The baptis- 
mal font is also blessed, a relic of the times when the catechumens 
used to be solemnly baptized, and solemn High Mass follows. 



The Exaltation of Christ. 

Christ humbled Himself, " becoming obedient unto death, even 
the death of the cross. For which cause God also hath exalted Him " 
(Phil. ii. 8, 9). As St. John Chrysostom warns us: "The exaltation 
of Christ referred only to His humanity. As God He possessed all 
earthly happiness and needed no further exaltation." And St. Cyp- 
rian confirms him when he says that it was not the x\lmighty but the 
humanity of the Almighty which was exalted. 

1. Immediately after the death of Christ His soul went down 
in triumph into the place where the souls of those justified under 
the Old Law were detained (Fourth Council of Lateran). 

This place is called limbo, and is quite distinct from purgatory, 
though the two places had this feature in common, that in neither 
place is there the vision of God ; for while there is pain to be suffered 
in purgatory, there was none in limbo ; nor was limbo the s,ame as hell, 
where the pains are eternal; on the contrary the souls in limbo had 
some consolation (Luke xvi. 25), though entrance to heaven was de- 
ferred (Heb. ix. 8) ; hence they longed for the coming of the Saviour 
to open to them the gates of heaven. Limbo is called in Scripture 



The Apostles' Creed. 189 

the " bosom of Abraham " (Luke xvi. 22) ; the " prison " (1 Pet. iii. 
19). Our Lord called the place "paradise" (Luke xxiii. 43), because 
by His arrival the prison-house would be turned into paradise. After 
tiie death of Christ limbo ceased to exist. There were in that place 
among others, Adam and Eve, Abel, Noe, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, 
Joseph, David, Isaias, Daniel, Job, Tobias, the foster-father of 
Christ, and many others, including those of ISToe's contemporaries 
who had done penance and repented at the Flood (1 Pet. iii. 20). 

Christ went do^vn into limbo to announce to the souls de- 
tained there the news of the redemption, and to set them free. 

Christ vrent down to announce to the souls in limbo that He had 
accomplished the redemption (1 Pet. iii. 19). St. Epiphanius tells us 
that the soul of Christ, united with the Godhead, went down into 
limbo, and St. Iremeus says that the Lord spent three days there. 
According to St. Ignatius of Antioch, Our Lord returned with a 
large company of souls. " He went," says St. Cyprian, " like a great 
king who delivers his subjects from a prison where they have been 
kept in durance." Christ revealed Himself also to the souls in hell, 
and they were compelled to bow the knee to Him (Phil. ii. 10). 

2. On Easter Sunday before sunrise Christ rose glorious from 
the tomb by His own almighty power. 

Christ often foretold that He would rise again on " the third day " 
(Luke xviii. 33) ; He compared Himself to Jonas (Matt. xii. 40) ; 
on the occasion of His driving the money-sellers out of the Temple, 
He said of His own body: "Destroy this temple and in three days I 
will raise it up " (John ii. 19) ; He claimed the power of laying down 
His life and taking it up again (John x. 18). When it is said in 
Holy Scripture that the Father raised Him (Rom. vi. 4; viii. 11), it 
is meant that as Christ is one with the Father all that Christ does 
the Father does also. The resurrection is a most undoubted fact. 
The Jews asserted that the disciples had stolen the body of Christ 
(Matt, xxviii. 13). Such an act was far beyond their power. The 
great stone that covered the sepulchre could not have been moved 
without waking some, at least, of the guards; "besides," as St. 
Augustine says, " these could not be accepted as witnesses if they 
were asleep;" and it is a remarkable circumstance that the soldiers 
were not punished for their breach of duty. Many free-thinkers 
urge that Christ was dead only in appearance, and after an interval 
recovered from His swoon and left the grave. The pain and loss of 
blood following on the scourging and crowning with thorns would 
have been enough to cause death, and the wound in the side alone, 
so great that St. Thomas could thrust in his hand, would have been 
fatal. Even when Christ was going to the place of execution, He was 
too weak to carry His cross; how could He, after thirty-six hours in 
the tomb, remove the long wrappings of His grave-clothes, roll away 
the stone, and m?ke His way out on feet yet fresh from the 
wounds of the nails ? The death of Christ was officially verified and 
reported to Pilate (Mark xv. 45), and His bones were not broken by 
the soldiers because they saw that He was dead (John xix. 33). The 
blood and water which flowed from the side of Christ after the pierc- 



190 Faith. 

ing with the lance, were a sign of death (John xix. 34). His holy 
Mother and His friends would never have placed Him in the tomb 
unless He had been dead. All the Evangelists agree in testifying 
to the death of Christ, 

The risen Lord bore in His body the ^yq wounds, and it had 
the properties of agility, subtilitj, clarity and impassibility. 

Christ retained the five wounds, for He ordered the unbelieving 
apostle to place his finger in the wounds of the nails, and his hand in 
the wound of the side (John xx. 27). Our Lord would keep the n^.arks 
of the wounds in heaven to show us that He would not forget us, 
bearing in His hands, as St. Bernard says, the writ of our redemption 
written in His own blood ; and St. Ambrose adds, that Our Lord bore 
these wounds to be a perpetual reminder to His heavenly Father 
of the price of our redemption, to renew the sacrifice of the cross 
forever in heaven (Heb. viii. 1-6). 

Christ rose again to prove to us that He is God, and that we, 
too, are to rise again. 

Christ is the first-fruits of them that sleep (1 Cor. xv. 20), and as 
Christ, our Head arose, so shall we all rise again (St. Irenseus). 
He called first His own body to life; later He will call the me:nbers 
of His mystical body to share its life (St. Athanasius). The hope 
of the resurrection was Job's consolation in his trouble (Job xix, 25). 
Throughout Christendom Easter is celebrated as the feast of the 
resurrection. In the Old Testament the Paschal Sabbath was kept 
in remembrance of the delivery from the Egyptian yoke. Among 
Christians, in accordance with a decision of the Council of Nicsea, 
325 A.D., the feast is celebrated on the first Sunday after the full 
moon which comes next after the spring equinox. In consequence 
Easter may fall anywhere between the twenty-second of March and 
the twenty-fifth of April. The heathen wakes to a new spiritual life 
in the waters of baptism; hence the blessing of the font on Holy 
Saturday; and all those who perform their Easter duties have a 
spiritual resurrection from the dead (Rom. vi. 4). In the words of 
St, Ambrose, if we are to rise from the grave of the flesh we must first 
rise from the grave of our sins. The Paschal candle, which is blessed 
on Holy Saturday is, on account of its five incense grains, which rep- 
resent the five woimds, a figure of Our Lord; and it is lighted at all 
services till Ascension Thursdaj^ The Easter eggs are a type of the 
resurrection: just as the young bird breaks from the shell, so will 
mankind arise again from the earth. The season itself is typical of 
the new life in the reawakening of nature. 

The risen Lord remained forty days on earth, and appeared 
frequently during this time to His disciples. 

St. Ambrose tells us that Christ appeared first to His holy Mother. 
St. Peter was the first of the apostles to see the risen Lord (Luke 
xxiv. 34). Early in the morning of Easter Sunday Christ appeared 
to Marj, Magdalen by the sepulchre (Mark xvi. 9; John xx. 15), 
and then to the holy women as they were leaving the grave (Matt. 
xxviii. 9) ; in the evening He appeared to the two disciples who were 



The Apostles' Creed. 191 

going to Emmaus (Luke xxiv.), and immediately after to the assem- 
bled disciples in the cenacle. He ate fish and honey in their presence, 
and afterwards gave them the power of forgiving sins (John xx.). 
On the following Sunday He appeared again in the same house and 
reproved Thomas for his want of faith (John xx.). He again ap- 
peared to seven of the disciples on the lake of Genesareth and gave 
St. Peter authority over the apostles and the faithful, telling him at 
the same time what death he should die (John xxi.). A more solemn 
occasion was the appearance to five hundred disciples on a mountain 
in Galilee, when He gave them the command to go forth into the 
world, teaching and baptizing (Matt, xxviii. 16). He spent there 
forty days in speaking to the disciples of the kingdom of God (Acts 
i. 3). The last appearance was on the occasion of His ascent into 
heaven. He appeared not in the night, but in the full light of day, 
not once only but repeatedly, not in some one place but in many 
places; nor were they instantaneous apparitions, but He remained 
some time, and spoke with His apostles. The resurrection was a point 
on which the apostles testified in person. They gave no credit to the 
women who came from the grave with their account of the angel 
(Luke xxiv. 11). They doubted the evidence of their own senses when 
Christ Himself appeared to them; then it was that He showed them 
His wounds, and allowed them to touch Him, and ate in their pres- 
ence (Luke xxiv. 42). Thomas refused to believe the ten apostles 
(John XX. 25), and this unbelief of St. Thomas is a greater help to 
our faith, to use the words of St. Gregory the Great, than the belief 
of all the rest. There was nothing of which the apostles had a 
stronger conviction than of the reality of the resurrection, and this 
they preached on the feast of Pentecost, before the Council, in the 
Temple, etc. 

3. Forty days after His resurrection Our Lord ascended into 
heaven from the Mount of Olives, and now sits at the right hand 
of God the Father. 

Before ascending Christ raised His hands and blessed His apos- 
tles, enjoining on them to preach the Gospel to all nations, and 
promising to be with them all days, till the end of the world (ITatt. 
xxviii. 18; Luke xxiv. 50). After the ascent two angels appeared and 
consoled the apostles (Acts i. 10). St. Jerome tells us that the im- 
press of Christ's sacred feet used to be shown to pilgrims; there re- 
mains now only the trace of the left foot, that of the right having 
been removed by the Turks. It is remarkable that from the direction 
of this footprint Our Lord must have been facing Europe as He 
mounted into heaven, just as He faced it during the crucifixion. 
Christ made His ascent from the Mount of Olives, where He began 
His Passion, to show us that the road to heaven must be through suf- 
fering. He ascended into heaven by His own power, not like Elias 
borne on a chariot (4 Kings ii. 11), or like Habacuc carried by an 
ane-cl (Dan. xiv. 36). His escort into heaven was formed of the souls 
released from limbo (Eph. iv. 8). The Fathers are of one mind in 
teaching that Christ has never descended in the flesh from heaven 
since then, except during holy Mass. Forty days after Easter the 
feast of Ascension Thursday is kept, preceded by the three Kogation 



192 Faith. 

days with their processions, symbolic of the going out of Christ 
with His apostles to the Mount of Olives. 

Christ ascended into heaven in order, as man, to enter into 
His kingdom (Eph. iv. 10), to send down the Holy Spirit (John 
xvi. 7), to intercede for us with the Father (JcHn xiv. 16), to 
prepare a place for us there (John xiv. 2). 

Christ is the mediator between God and man (1 Tim. ii. 5), and 
our advocate with the Father (1 John ii. 1). "H," says St. Bernard, 
"you fear to go to God the Father, turn to Jesus Christ, Who has 
been given to us as a mediator. What can such a Father refuse to 
such a Son ? " Christ is often likened to the sun, which sheds its 
light and warmth the higher it rises in the heavens. 

Christ sits on the right hand of God, that is, as man He 
has power over all creatures. 

To sit on the right hand was a mark of special honor (3 Kings ii. 
19) ; hence the expression " Christ sits on the right hand of God " is 
equivalent to : " Christ is next in honor to God." He is therefore 
above all the angels (Eph. i. 21). God the Father has no body; so 
that when we speak of the right hand of God, we mean, as St. John 
Damascene tells us, the glory of His Godhead, of which Christ took 
possession in the flesh. The expression, " sits," is significant of His 
royal and judicial powers. The words of Christ Himself were : " All 
power is given to Me in heaven and on earth" (Matt, xxviii. 18). 
Hence all creatures owe Him divine homage (Phil. ii. 9-11). 

4. On the tenth day after His ascending into heaven Christ 
sent down the Holy Ghost on the apostles. 

The Holy Ghost descended on a Sunday, about nine o'clock in 
the morning (Acts ii. 15). The signs accompanying His descent were 
sjrmbolical of His action; the rush of wind represented the strength- 
ening of the will, the fire the illumination of the understanding, the 
tongues the gift of tongues to the apostles and the teaching of the 
Gospel to all nations. Pentecost is the day of foundation of the 
Church, because it began on that day by the baptism of three thou- 
sand new members. Pentecost is celebrated fifty days after Easter — 
Pentecost meaning fifty. In the Old Law this day was celebrated 
fifty days after the Exodus, in memory of the promulgation of the 
commandments on Mount Sinai. On Mount Sion as on Mount Sinai 
was God's will declared amid lightning and thunder, and in both 
cases fifty days after the release in one instance from bodily, in 
the other from spiritual slavery. It is the custom to bless the font 
in memory of the three thousand who were baptized on this day. 
The Saturday preceding was always observed as a fast day, that 
like the apostle?? we might prepare for the coming of the Holy Spirit. 
The Sunday following Wliitsunday is Trinity Sunday, and on the 
Thursday following is kept the feast of Corpus Christi. 

At the end of the world Christ mil come again to judge all 
men. 



The Apostles' Greed. 193 

7. THE PERSON OF TEE REDEEMER. 

Jesus Christ, Our Redeemer, is the Son of God made man; 
hence He is God Himself. 

The Incarnation of the Son of God. 

The heathen had yerj early conceived the idea that God had 
descended from heaven and mixed with men; the Greek mythology- 
is full of it. Now God has actually come down to earth (John iii. 13) 
at the moment of the Annunciation (Luke i. 26-38). 

1. The second divine person became man in the womb of the 
Blessed Virgin Mary by the action of the Holy Ghost at the 
moment of the Annunciation. 

Louis of Granada writes : " Just as the sun must be wrapped in 
clouds if we are to gaze upon it with eyes undimmed, so God wrapped 
Himself in flesh as in a cloud, so that the eyes of our soul might 
bear to look upon Him." Human thought must be clothed in words 
to reach our ears ; so God clothed Himself in human nature to reach 
the souls of men. " The Word [i.e., the Son of God] was made flesh 
[i.e., became man] and dwelt amongst us" (John i. 14). The In- 
carnation took place in the instant when Our Lady uttered the words : 
"Be it done unto me according to thy word" (Luke i. 38). They 
err who think that the human nature was first formed and afterwards 
united to the divine person, just as the Valentinians were wrong in 
asserting that Christ brought His human body from heaven. Christ 
received His body from the Virgin Mary. He was made from a 
woman (Gal. iv. 4), and was of the seed of David (Eom. i. 3). The 
Son of man came down from heaven, it is true (John iii. 13), in re- 
gard of the divine person, but not in regard of His human nature; 
we must not, however, imagine that the divine essence came down 
from heaven and united itself to the human nature ; this would mean 
that all three persons of the Blessed Trinity has assumed our human 
nature. Such a thing is impossible, for such a union would require 
a change in the divine essence, which is incapable of change. Only 
one of the divine persons, the Son of God, assumed our human 
nature. God (i.e., a divine person) not the Godhead (i.e., the divine 
essence) became man. There is, however, an intimate union be- 
tween the nature of God and the nature of man in the person of the 
Son; and it is certain that all the divine persons had their share in 
the work of the Incarnation, for in the work which God does outside 
Himself all three persons of the Trinity have their share. 

The Incarnation is in a peculiar manner the work of the 
three divine persons. 

The three divine persons formed a human soul and a human 
body and united to them the Second Person of the Trinity. As St. 
Augustine puts it: "In the guitar the sound soems to come from 
the strings alone, yet three elements are wanted, the human hand, 
the skill of the player and then the string." Or as St. Fulgentius 
explains it : " Body and soul are necessary for a man to profit by his 



194 Faith. 

food, yet the body alone receives the nourishment." So the three per- 
sons of the Trinity co-operated in the Incarnation, but the Second 
Person only was united to the flesh. The Incarnation is ascribed in a 
special manner to the Holy Ghost, because it is the greatest work of 
God's love. The Church teaches that the works of love are ascribed 
to the Holy Ghost, Who is the love of the Father and the Son. 
According to the Fathers there is no doubt that either God the 
Father or the Holy Ghost might have become man; but it was meet 
that He Who is the Son of God from all eternity should become the 
Son of man ; that He Who is the perfect image of God should restore 
to mankind that supernatural image which had been lost by sin. 

2. The Father of Jesus is therefore God the Father in heaven; 
Joseph, the spouse of Mary, is only the foster-father of Jesus. 

St. Gregory the Great tells us that Christ is the Son of God, not 
only because He is the Second Person of the Blessed Trinity, but also 
because God formed His sacred humanity. In the first promise of the 
Redeemer as we read it in the Protevangelium Christ is called, not 
the seed of man, but the seed of the woman (Gen. iii. 15), and in the 
genealogy of Christ recorded by St. Matthew, no mention is made of 
His descent from Joseph, but only from Mary (Matt. i. 16). Yet 
Christ was commonly thought to be the Son of Joseph (Luke iii. 23). 
Mary was espoused to St. Joseph that no accusation might be made 
against her by the world, and that she might have in him a protector. 
About St. Joseph we have the following facts: He was a carpenter 
(Matt. xiii. 55) ; he was a just man (Matt. i. 19). St. Jerome tells 
us he was perfect in every virtue, and St. Thomas Aquinas gives as 
the reason for his holiness that he was so close to the fount of holi- 
ness, just as the spring is clearer as we approach its source. St. 
Francis of Sales tells us that St. Joseph was conspicuous for his 
purity, and therein surpassed all the saints and even the angels. 
To him was granted the honor which kings and prophets sighed 
for in vain; he might take his Lord into his arms, kiss Him, speak 
with Him, clothe Him, protect Him (St. Bernard). He was called 
father by Him Whose Father was in heaven (St. Basil). Many saints 
assert that St. Joseph has a very high place in heaven as the spouse 
of the Blessed Virgin, and that he will be called upon by men in the 
last days of the world and give signs of his great power. St. Joseph 
is the patron of the Church (Pius IX., Dec. 8, 1870) ; i.e., his prayers 
for the Church have great efiicacy at the throne of God. He is also 
the patron of a happy death, dying as he did himself in the arms of 
Jesus and Mary. He is also invoked for temporal wants, since his 
care on this earth was the support of the Holy Family. St. Thomas 
Aquinas says that St. Joseph received power from God to help in 
all. necessities; and St. Teresa declared that no prayer of hers to 
St. Joseph in temporal or spiritual need was ever left unanswered. 
The Catholic Church has always honored St. Joseph in a special man- 
ner, after Our Lady and above the other saints. 

3. The Incarnation of the Son of God is a mystery which we 
cannot understand, but only admire and honor. 

The conception and Incarnation are as little understood by us 



The Apostles' Creea ' 195 

as the flowering of the rod of Aaron (JSTumb. xvii.). " Shut thy eyes, 
Keason," says St. Bernard, " for under the veil of faith thou canst 
see the sheen of this mystery, just as the eye of the body can bear 
the light of the sun when shaded by a cloud." " I know that the Son 
of God became man, but how I do not know " (St. John Chrysostom). 
The following are illustrations which have been used to convey the 
idea of the union of the Godhead and the human nature in Christ: 
The divinity and the humanity are united in Christ as body and soul 
are united in man (Athanasian Creed). If spirit and matter, so 
essentially distinct, are united in man, all the less matter of surprise 
is it that the divinity and humanity, which after all have their points 
of resemblance, are found united in Christ. " Speech is a sort of 
incarnation," says St. Augustine. " At first the word is conceived as 
a mere thought, something purely spiritual. If that thought is to be 
conveyed to another, it is put in words ; yet, though it appeals to the 
senses, it is none the less produced from the soul. So the Word of 
God has appeared to many and ceases not to remain with the Father." 
Other illustrations to show the action of the Holy Ghost in Christ's 
conception: St. Isidore tells us that Christ was formed from Mary 
just as Eve was formed from Adam. The Incarnation resembles in 
some respects the creation, when everything was produced by God's 
almighty power without co-operation of man. 

The mystery of the Incarnation is commemorated by the 
ringing of the Angelus bell. 

The words of the Angelus recall in the most lively way the scene 
of the Annunciation. At the words in the Credo of the Mass : " He 
took flesh in the womb of the Blessed Virgin Mary by the Holy Ghost*' 
the celebrant always kneels, also at the words in the Last Gospel: 
" And the Word was made flesh." On Christmas Day and the Annun- 
ciation (the twenty-fifth of March), the sacred ministers at High 
Mass kneel on the altar steps and bow their heads at the "Et incar- 
natus est" of the Credo. The angels also venerate the mystery of 
the Incarnation. 

4. The Incarnation of the Son of God was necessary to give 
perfect satisfaction to the injured majesty of God. 

God might have chosen some other means for redeeming man. 
He might, by special exercise of His goodness, have been content 
with an imperfect satisfaction, or have remitted the guilt without 
demanding any satisfaction at all. St. Augustine on this subject 
writes : " There are some foolish people who think that God could not 
have redeemed mankind otherwise than by Himself taking flesh, and 
suffering at the hands of sinners. He might have followed quite 
another plan." As we shall see in treating of the death of Christ 
God wished to have perfect satisfaction, to display His justice as well 
as His mercy. Perfect satisfaction could be given only by a God- 
man. The greatness of an injury is measured by the dignity of the 
person who suffers ; hence the offence given to God is infinitely great. 
Xo finite being, not even tbe most perfect angel, could atone for an 
offence against God, only God Himself. " So that," to use the words 
of St. Anselm, " to redeem man it was necessary that God should be- 



196 Faith. 

come man." As God only He could not suffer ; as man only He could 
not redeem; hence the Godhead assumed a human nature (St. Pro- 
clus). If a valuable portrait be damaged beyond recognition it can- 
not be restored unless the sitter present himself to the artist; thus 
God had to come down on earth to restore His likeness in man (St. 
Athanasius). 

The God-man could satisfy perfectly the injured majesty 
of God by appearing on earth in a state of lowliness. 

Had He appeared in His majesty men would never have dared 
to crucify Him (1 Cor. ii. 8). Like Codrus, the Athenian king, He 
secured victory to His own by dying for them. The oracle had 
promised the Athenians rictory if their king died by the hands cf 
the enemy, and Codrus, disguising his royal dress, marched into the 
enemy's camp and was by them put to death. The prophets had 
foretold that mankind should be saved by the death of its King, 
and Christ, taking on the form of a slave, was put to death. The 
evil spirits fled when they saw Whom they had killed. " H," as 
Louis of Granada says, " a king would prove his courage in battle, 
he must put away all symbols of his rank, to proclaim them only 
when he is victor;" and this is what Our Lord did. He will come 
again with great power and majesty (Matt. xxvi. 64). St. Thomas 
says that we cannot affirm with certainty that God would have become 
man had man not sinned; it certainly would not have been beyond 
His power. 

6. The Second Person always remained God though He be- 
came man, and by the Incarnation He lost none of His dignity. 

When we assert that the Son of God came down on earth, we do 
not mean that He left heaven. So a star may become visible to us 
without leaving the firmament. As St. Ambrose says, the divinity of 
Christ is not destroyed, but only hidden by His human nature, just 
as the sun is not put out, but veiled only by the clouds. And as the 
thought, because spoken, does not cease to be a product of the soul, 
so the Word of God did not cease to be with the Father (St. Augus- 
tine). As a word, though spoken only for the benefit of one person 
may be heard by all the bystanders, so the divine Word was not lim- 
ited by the body which He assumed, but still fills heaven and earth. 
Moreover God lost none of His dignity by the Incarnation. The 
sunlight which plays over filth is not defiled ; still less is the Godhead 
defiled by taking fiesh from the pure womb of Mary (St. Odilo). H 
a prince put on a slave's dress and in it picked a precious ring from 
the gutter to place it on his finger, there is no loss of dignity ; so, too, 
the Son of God was not degraded by taking on Himself the form of a 
slave, and coming down on earth to save souls and gain them to Him 
(Tert.). When the Apostle says that Jesus Christ debased Himself 
by taking the form of a servant (Phil. ii. 7), he does not mean that 
God lost anything, but only that He assumed a nature lower than His 
own, and gave us thereby an example of humility. " He humbled 
Himself" (Phil. ii. 8). 

6. By the Incarnation of the Son of God all the members of 
the human race have acquired a special dignity. 



Tlie Apostles' Creed. 197 

The human nature of the Son of God is like the yeast which 
leavens the whole mass (Matt. xiii. 33). Christ is the vine, and we 
are the branches (John xv.). The angels even fall short of us in this 
respect, for though they are exempt from sickness and death they 
cannot claim God for their Brother ; were they capable of envy, they 
would envy us that honor. As St. Ambrose says : " The Almighty 
took the form of a slave that the slave might become a king." " The 
Son of God became the Son of man that the children of men might 
become children of God" (St. Athanasius). "Oh, what a wondrous 
redemption is that where man is, as it were, put on a par with God ! " 
(St. Plilary.) 

^¥hat Truths follow from the Mystery of the Redemption? 

1. Christ is true God and true man; hence we call Him the 
God-man. 

Every being gets its nature whence it has its origin; thus a child 
gets its human nature by being born of man. Christ, therefore, 
having His origin from God the Father, derives from Him His divine 
nature, and by being born of Mary, derives from her His human 
nature. He claimed both divine and human attributes. He said, 
for example, " The Father is greater than I " (John xiv. 28), and yet 
on another occasion: " The Father and I are one" (John x. 30). As 
God He calls Mary " woman," as on the occasion of the wedding-feast 
at Cana, and as man He calls her " Mother." He called HimseK at 
times " Son of God " and again " Son of man." 

Christ, as man, is like to us in all things except sin (Council 
of Chalcedon). 

Christ became like to His brethren (Heb. ii. 17) ; He was made in 

the likeness of man and in habit formed as a man (Phil. ii. 7). Christ 
had a human body, with all its consequent needs of eating and drink- 
ing and sleeping, as well as of suffering and dying; and He had a 
real body, not a fictitious one, as the Docetse taught. Christ had a 
human soul, and so a human intellect, and a human will (for He 
prayed in the garden : " Father, not My wiH, but Thine be done " 
(Luke xxii. 42). At His death Christ gave His soul into the hands 
of His heavenly Father (Luke xxiii. 46). St. Paul (1 Cor. xv. 47) 
calls Christ the " heavenly " man, in opposition to the " earthly " man, 
Adam; his meaning being that Christ's body was heavenly in the 
sense that it was formed supernaturally in the womb of a virgin by 
the action of the Holy Spirit and that it displayed on earth some of 
the properties of glorified bodies, as on Mount Thabor and the walk- 
ing on the waters. 

2. In Christ there are two natures, human and divine, which 
despite their intimate union are quite distinct. 

The nature or essence is the total of the powers belonging to a 
being. The person is the possessor of this nature; or perhaps more 
strictly, that which is common to all men is the nature and that which 
constitutes man an independent individual is the person. Thus the 



198 Faith, 

nature may embrace many individuals, but not so the person. Just 
as iron and gold may be welded into one solid mass, and still remain 
with all tlieir individual properties distinct, so are the two natures 
united in Christ. JSTor is the human nature changed into the divine 
nature, as the water was changed into wine at Cana; nor again is the 
human nature, as Eutyches thought, absorbed into the Godhead as a 
drop of honey might be lost in the expanse of the ocean; nor have 
the two natures combined to form a third, as hydrogen and oxygen 
combine to form water. 

Hence Christ has a twofold knowledge, human and divine. 

As God He knew all things, even the thoughts of men; and He 
also knew all things as man on account of the hypostatic union; the 
reason why He denied all knowledge of the day and hour of the Last 
Judgment was because He was not intrusted with His knowledge 
to communicate it to man (Mark xiii. 32). 

Hence also Christ has a twofold will, human and divine, the 
human being subject to the divine (Third Council Constant.). 

We learn from the prayer in the garden that Christ had a human 
will: " Not My will but Thine be done" (Luke xxii. 42), subject how- 
ever to the divine will : " I seek not My own will but the will of Him 
that sent Me " (John v. 30). So a patient may shrink from the pain 
of an operation, and yet submit himself to the hands of the surgeon. 

Thus Christ has a twofold activity, human and divine (Third 
Council Constantinople, a.d. 680). 

To His divine activity belong the miracles and prophesies, to 
the human principle of action the operations of sleeping, eating, 
drinking and suffering. The three persons of the Blessed Trinity 
have only one nature and so one principle of action. 

3. In Christ there is only one person, and that person is divine. 

^nobius compares this with the two eyes forming only one 
image, or the two ears conveying one sound. In the words of the 
Athanasian Creed : " As the rational soul and the flesh is one man, 
so God and man is one Christ." The human nature in Christ, though 
completed by a divine and not a human personality, is for that very 
reason more perfect ; just as in man the body is more perfect on ac- 
count of being informed by a human soul, than in the lowex* animals. 
Moreover as in man the body is an instrument by which the soul acts, 
so in Christ the human nature is the instrument by which the divine 
person acts; nor is Christ's body a lifeless tool, like a pen in the hand 
of a writer, but it is full of life and has its own special activity. 
The humanity of Christ is, it must be remembered, not an instru- 
ment of God's action in the same way as were the prophets or the 
apostles, etc. Its union and action are far more intimate, just as 
the eye and the hand of the workman are more concerned in his 
work than the tools. We must avoid the error of ISTestorius, con- 
demned at the Council of Ephesus, in which he taught that in Christ 
the Godhead dwelt in a distinct person (i.e., that the God Christ 
dwelt in the man Christ) as in a temple. 



The Apostles' Creed. 199 

Since in Christ the divine and human natures are insepa- 
rably united by His divine personality, the following proposi- 
tions are true: 

1. Christ is, as man, the true Son of God. 

St. Paul's words on the subject are : " He spared not His own Son, 
but delivered Him up for us all " (Eom. viii. 32). 

2. Mary, the Mother of Christ, is really Mother of God. 

St. Elizabeth called her the Mother of God (Luke i. 43). Nes- 
torius' heresy that Mary should be called only the Mother of Christ, 
was condemned at the Council of Ephesus in a.d. 431. " If," as St. 
Cyril says, " Cur Lord Jesus Christ is God, how can it be that the 
holy Virgin who bore Him is not Mother of God ? " Though the 
mother does not give the soul to her offspring, she is none the less 
called the mother; so Mary is called the Mother of God, though she 
did not give to Christ His divine nature. 

3. Christ, as man, could neither sin nor err. 

Christ did no sin either in word or in deed (1 Pet. ii. 22) ; or, in the 
words of St. Gregory the Great : " As light permits no darkness in its 
neighborhood, so the Son of God admitted no sin in His human 
nature." Christ had from His birth all wisdom and knowledge (Col. 
ii. 3). The words " Christ grew in wisdom and grace" (Luke ii. 52), 
mean that with the passage of time He ever showed more of the wis- 
dom and grace of God in His speech and conduct. There must have 
been in His person something majestic (Ps. xliv. 3) ; St. Jerome says 
that the glory and majesty of the Godhead was reflected on His face, 
and gave it a beauty which attracted and subjected all those who had 
the happiness of gazing upon Him. 

4. All Christ's human actions have an infinite value. 

What Christ did as man was a human action, and also a divine 
action, inasmuch as He was God. St. John Damascene says : " Just 
as iron raised to a glow burns not because burning is a property of the 
iron itself, but because it has acquired the property from the fire, 
80 the human actions of Christ were divine, not of their own nature, 
but on account of the intimate union with the Godhead." The very 
least prayer or suffering of Christ might thus have redeemed all men. 

5. Christ's humanity is worthy of adoration. 

This adoration is directed, not to the human nature, but to the 
divine person. Thus a child kissing the hand of its parent is paying 
homage to the parent, not to the hand. As St. Thomas says : " We 
pay honor to the king and the purple which he wears; so in Christ 
we adore the humanity along with the Godhead, since they are insep- 
arable." St. John Damascene points out that we do not adore mere 
flesh, but the flesh as united to the divinity. Thus the Church adorea 
the five wounds, the Sacred Heart, the precious blood, etc. 

6. Human attributes may be predicated of Christ as God, 



300 FaitK 

and divine attributes of Christ as man (the so-called communi- 
cation of characters or idioms). 

Hence St. Peter's reproach : " The Author of life you have killed " 
(Acts iii. 15), and St. Paul's words: "If they had known it they 
would never have crucified the Lord of glory" (1 Cor. ii. 8), as well 
as St. John's " Therein do we know the love of God, that He laid down 
His life for us." Since the second divine person and the man Christ 
Jesus are one and the same person, whatever is said of Christ as God 
may also be said of Him as man (e.g., this man is omniscient or al- 
mighty), and what we say of Christ as man may be said of the second 
divine person (e.g., God suffered for us, died for us, etc.). When a 
man is both good and rich, we may say without error : " This rich 
man is good," or " This good man is rich," because we are talking of 
the person who is rich and good. We may do the same in regard of 
the divine person Who is at the same time God and man, and in con- 
sequence has the attributes proper to God and man. So we might 
say " This sufferer is God," " This dying man is almighty." But we 
cannot say " The Godhead suffered or died," because the word "God- 
head " means the divine nature, and it never suffered. Hence St. 
John Damascene wrote : " Though the Godhead was in a suffering 
form, the Godhead did not suffer. The sun is not hurt, though the 
tree on which it shines is felled." 

Jesus Christ is the Son of God. 

Christ called Himself the only-begotten Son of God (John iii. 16), 
and this because He and He alone is the Second Person of the Trin- 
ity, begotten of the Father. In addition He is far removed above the 
angels and mankind, who are likewise called the children of God. 
For to these latter God has not communicated His own nature (Phil, 
ii. 6) and has adopted them only by a special grace (Gal. iv. 5). 

1. Jesus Christ solemnly declared before the high priest that 
He was the Son of God (Matt. xxvi. 64) . 

And He called Himself the Son of God also on the occasion 
of His healing of the man born blind (John ix. 37). 

2. God the Father called Jesus Christ His Son on the occasion 
of His baptism in the Jordan and of the transfiguration on Mount 
Thabor (Matt. iii. 17; xvii. 5). 

3. The archangel Gabriel called Jesus Christ the " Son of 
the Most High " when he announced His birth to Mary (Luke i, 
32). 

4. St. Peter also publicly addressed Jesus Christ as " Son of 
the living God," and was commended by Christ for this confes- 
sion (Matt. xvi. 16). 

5. Even the devils cried out: "What have we to do with 
Thee, Jesus, Son of God? Art Thou come hither to torment 
us before the time ? " (Matt. viii. 29.) 



The Apostles' Creed, 201 



Jesus Christ is God Himself. 

It had already been foretold : " God Himself will come and will 
save you" (Ts. xxxv. 4), and Isaias said that the Child Who was to 
be born for the redemption of men was God Himself (Is. ix. 6). The 
heretic Arius denied Christ's Godhead ; his heresy was condemned at 
the Council of Nicaaa in a.d. 325, and it was expressly defined that 
Jesus Christ was of the same nature as God and therefore Himself 
God. Our whole position rests on this doctrine, hence its great im- 
portance. When the rich disciple addressed Christ as " good master/' 
Our Lord answered at once, " Why dost thou call Me good ? None 
is good but God alone " (Luke xviii. 19) ; He would thereby teach us 
that we must before all things recognize Him as God. 

1. That Jesus Christ is God we learn from His own words 
and from those of His apostles. 

When ascending into heaven He said : " All power is given to Me 
in heaven and on earth" (Matt, xxviii. 18); and again: "I and the 
Father are one " (John x. 30). These last words were treated by the 
Jews as blasphemy, and they threatened to stone Our Lord for them 
(John X. 33). Christ claimed in a special manner attributes and 
works such as belong to God alone. He proclaimed His eternity when 
He said : " Glorify Thou Me, O Father, with Thyself with the glory 
which I had before the world was, with Thee" (John xvii. 5). And 
again: "Before Abraham was, I am" (John viii. 58). He claimed 
the power of forgiving sins as in the case of Magdalen (Luke vii. 
48), and the man sick of the palsy (Matt. ix. 2). He laid claim to 
awaken the dead (John v. 28), to judge the world (Matt.xxv. 31),to be 
the Author of life (John xi. 25). On another occasion Lie said: "If 
any man keep My word, he shall not see death forever" (John viii. 
51). The apostles believed and solenmly proclaimed that Christ was 
God, St. Thomas for instance, in the words: "My Lord and my 
God ! " In St. Paul's epistles we read : " In Christ dwelleth all the 
fulness of the Godhead corporally" (Col. ii. 9), and "In Him were 
created all things . . . and He is before all, and by Him all things 
consist" (Col. 1^16,17). 

2. That Jesus Christ is God we conclude from His miracles 
and prophecies. 

The numerous miracles which Christ wrought in His own 
name testify to His almighty power. 

The miracles may be divided into five classes. (1). Those per- 
formed on inanimate substances, such as the changing of the water 
into wine, the calming of the storm, etc. (2). The healing of the 
sick, the blind, and the lame (Matt. xi. 3-5). (3). The raising of 
the dead to life, for example, in the case of the daughter of Jairus, 
of the son of the widow of Naim, of Lazarus. (4). The expelling 
of devils from possessed persons. (5). The miracles on His own 
person, as the transfiguration and the ascension. Moreover Christ 
proved that He had power over all creation as no other had. Others 
did miracles in the name of God, as, for example, when St. Peter 



202 Faith, 

and St. John cured tlie man at the gate of the Temple. Christ did 
not appeal in God's name. He said simply : " Young man, I say to 
thee, arise ! " (Luke vii. 14.) " I will. Be thou made clean " (Matt, 
viii. 3) ; " Peace, be still." Benedict XIV. is careful to tell us that if 
Christ prayed to the Father it was to dispel the notion that Plis 
miracles were from the devil. The miracles attributed to the found- 
ers of false religions are often very absurd and childish ; that Buddha 
rode on a sunbeam, that Mohammed caused the moon to pass through 
his sleeve, that Apollonius of Tyana raised a storm in a barrel, etc. 
So different from the majesty displayed by Christ! 

The prophecies of Christ with respect to His own fate, the 
treachery of Judas, and the denial of St. Peter, the death of St. 
John and St. Peter, the destruction of Jerusalem, the fate of 
the Jews, and the career of the Church, all show His om- 
niscience. 

Christ foretold that He would be put to death in Jerusalem (Luke 
xiii. 32), that He would be scourged and crucified, and would rise 
again after three days (Matt. xx. 17-19). At the Last Supper He 
foretold the treachery of Judas (John xiii. 26), and that Peter would 
deny Him thrice before the cock would crow (Matt. xxvi. 34). After 
His resurrection He prophesied to Peter his death on the cross, and 
to John that he should die a natural death (John xxi. 18-22). After 
His triumphal entry into Jerusalem (Luke xix. 41, 44), and during 
His discourse on the Last Judgment on the Mount of Olives (Matt, 
xxiv.) He foretold how Jerusalem should be surrounded by her ene- 
mies and destroyed. He also knew that the Jews should be scattered 
among the nations (Luke xxi. 24), that His Church should spread 
rapidly among the nations of the earth (John x. 16; Matt. xiii. 31) 
in spite of the persecution of His apostles (John xvi. 2). 

3. That Jesus Christ is God we conclude from the elevation 
of His teaching and His character. 

The teaching of Christ surpasses that of the wisest who have 
ever lived on earth, and is far removed from the teaching of all 
other religions. 

Christ's doctrine answers all the needs of the human heart, and is 
adapted to all, whatever be their station, age, sex, or nation; the 
greatest philosophers, even men like St. Augustine, found in it the 
peace they longed for. Christ's doctrine is a perfect revelation of the 
highest end of man and of the creation, besides inculcating the 
loftiest virtues : such as love of one's neighbor, humility, gentleness, 
patience, love of one's enemies, poverty, which up to the time of 
Christ had been quite unknown. Kant confesses that reason would 
not, even at the present day, have discovered the universal moral 
law unless Christianity had taught it. Christ's teaching, besides 
being lofty, was so simple, and announced with such clearness, that 
the people marvelled to hear Him (Matt. vii. 28). Even Strauss does 
not hesitate to declare that to surpass the teaching of Jesus is an im- 
possible task for all time. There is absolutely nothing in the Chris- 
tian religion that is opposed to sound reason, or can lower the true 



The Apostles' Creed. 203 

dignity of man. Of how many of the other forms of religion can 
that be said ? Mohammedanism teaches fatalism and is propagated 
by the sword. Even the Talmud contains a large mixture of very 
imperfect doctrine. 

Christ was free from all sin, and was so conspicuous for vir- 
tue that for all time He must remain the model for all men. 

The traitor Judas confessed that he had shed " innocent blood " 
(Matt, xxxvii. 4) ; Pilate could find no cause in Christ (John xviii. 
38) ; Christ Himself challenged the Jews : " Which of you shall con- 
vince Me of sin ? " and none of them dared reply (John viii. 46). He 
was quite free from all prejudices and narrow-mindedness, which are 
the result of surroundings and nationality. We see this in His rela- 
tions to the Samaritans and Romans, more especially in the beautiful 
parable of the Good Samaritan (Matt. x. 30-37). The following virtues 
were most conspicuous : His love of His neighbor : " He went about 
doing good " (Acts x. 38) and laid down His life for others ; His 
humility, which was seen in His associating with the most despised 
among the people; His gentleness in His forbearance with His ene- 
mies and even with the disciple who betrayed Him; His patience in 
suffering the greatest tortures ; His clemency in His conduct towards 
sinners; His love of His enemies in His praying for them on the 
cross; His love of prayer in spending whole nights praying to the 
Father. His whole character is one of the wonders of history. His 
greatest enemies even felt awe in His presence; no one, for instance, 
dared resist Him when He drove the buyers and sellers out of the 
Temple (Matt. xxi. 12). When the Pharisees wished to stone Him 
for claiming to be God, He went through their midst and they made 
way for Him (John x. 39). The soldiers in the garden fell to the 
groimd at a word from His lips (John xviii. 6). 

4. That Jesus Christ is God we conclude from the rapid spread 
of His teaching and from the miracles which accompanied this 
teaching throughout the world. 

His teaching was propagated in spite of the greatest ob- 
stacles, and by the simplest of means. 

The obstacles among the heathen were: The laws condemning to 
death or banishment those who professed a new religion. Calumnies 
the grossest were uttered against the Christians, accusing them of 
being godless, of cannibalism, attributing to them various misfortunes 
such as wars, pestilence, and famine. All this led to a persecution 
extending over some three hundred years ; up to the edict of Constan- 
tine the Great there are reckoned about ten persecutions. The doc- 
trines of the Christians afforded another series of obstacles ; the rever- 
ence paid to One Who had suffered the death of the cross was ac- 
counted a folly, added to which this doctrine was introduced by Jews, 
a sect held in the lowest esteem by the Eomans. No less repulsive 
to the sensual and pleasure-loving heathen were the restraint and 
self-denial inculcated by the Christian religion. The means em- 
ployed for converting the world were twelve poor fishermen, un* 
equipped with eloquence to persuade, or with the countenance of the 
great ones of the earth to support their mission. They did indeed 



204 Faith. 

work miracles, but, as St. Augustine says, the spread of Christianity 
without miracles would have been the greatest miracle of any. On 
Pentecost five thousand were baptized; two thousand more after the 
miracle at the gate of the Temple, and in the year a.d. 100 Christian- 
ity had extended over the whole Koman world. Pliny, the Governor of 
Bithynia, reported to the Emperor Trajan that the heathen temples 
were left empty because all were becoming Christians in the towns 
and villages. St. Justinus, the philosopher, wrote in a.d. 150: 
" There is not a nation where prayers are not offered to the heavenly 
Father in the name of the Crucified." 

The effect of Christ's teaching was that idolatry with its 
horrible abuses disappeared, and that the whole life of man was 
reformed and ennobled. 

The sacrifice of human victims was abolished, and the bloody 
spectacles of the gladiatorial shows. All kinds of charitable institu- 
tions arose for the blind, the poor, the sick, etc., owing their existence 
to the teaching of Christian mercy. Polygamy died out, and woman 
regained her dignity. Order was established in the family life by 
the Christian doctrine of the indissolubility of the marriage tie. 
Slavery was gradually abolished, for every man saw in his neighbor 
the image of God. The cruel laws against malefactors became milder, 
and wars became less frequent. Trade, science, and art were 
cultivated more, and labor acquired a new dignity. Even Julian the 
Apostate counselled the heathen to imitate the Christians in the gen- 
erosity and purity of their lives. A religion which produces so much 
good must be from God. It is sometimes urged that Christ's teach- 
ing has been the cause of many religious wars and schisms. The 
answer to this objection is that it is not Christ's teaching but man's 
perversity in not following that teaching, or wresting it to his own 
destruction, which causes so much evil. 

Jesus Christ is Our Lord. 

Christ's words at the Last Supper were : " You call Me Master 
and Lord, and you say well, for so I am " (John xiii. 13). 

We call Christ ^^ Our Lord " because He is our Creator, Re- 
deemer, lawgiver, Teacher, and Judge. 

Christ is our Creator : " In Him were all things created in heaven 
and on earth, visible and invisible" (Col. i. 16), and by His Son God 
made the world (Heb. i. 2). St. John calls Christ the Word, and 
says: " Without Him was made nothing that was made " (John i. 3). 
Christ is our Redeemer. By Him we are set free from the slavery of 
the devil (1 Pet. i. 18). Hence the Apostle says: " Know ye not that 
... ye are not your own, for you are bought with a great price " (1 
Cor. vi. 10). He is also our Lawgiver, for He developed the teaching 
of the Ten Commandments, and gave the two precepts of love. He 
called Himself the "Lord of the Sabbath" (Luke vi. 5). Christ is 
our Teacher, because He taught men to be like to God, and in John 
xiii. 13, He calls Himself our Master. Christ is also our Judge, for 
He will come again in glory to summon all mankind before His judg- 



The Apostles' Creed, 205 

ment-seat and separate the sheep from the goats (Matt. xxv. 31, 32). 
Then will the just as well as the wicked address Him, saying: " Lord, 
when did we see Thee hungry or thirsty, or a stranger, or naked, or 
sick, or in prison ? " (Matt. xxv. 37, 44.) " He is the blessed and only 
mighty, the King of kings and Lord of lords ... to Whom be honor 
and empire everlasting. Amen" (1 Tim. vi. 15, 16). 



EIGHTH ARTICLE OF THE CREED : THE HOLY GHOST. 

1. THE GRACE OF THE HOLY GHOST IS 
NECESSARY TO US. 

1. The Holy Ghost is the Third Person of the Blessed Trinity, 
and is therefore God Himself. 

Hence He is eternal, omnipresent, omniscient, almighty. 

" The Holy Ghost," says TertuUian, " is God of God, as light is 
of light." St. Cyril of Alexandria compares the Holy Ghost in His 
likeness to the Father and the Son, to the vapor arising from water, 
which is like in its nature to the water producing it. St. Isidore, 
commenting on these words of Christ : " I drive out devils through 
the finger of God," says that as the finger is of the same nature as the 
body, so the Holy Ghost is of the nature of God. St. Athanasius 
writes that the Holy Ghost is called the finger of God, because it is 
only through Him that the Father and the Son enter into communi- 
cation with man. Through Him it was that the tables of stone were 
written. In the second General Council of Constantinople in a.d. 381, 
it was defined that the Holy Ghost is eternal, omnipresent, etc., in 
opposition to the heresy of Macedonius. The Holy Ghost proceeds 
from the Father and the Son. The Greeks, who denied this article 
of faith and fell away from the Church in a.d. 867 and a.d. 1053 fell 
under the Turkish yoke in the year 1453 a.d., and strangely enough 
on the feast of Pentecost. 

2. The Holy Ghost dispenses the graces which Christ merited 
by the sacrifice of the cross. 

The Holy Ghost produces nothing in addition to what Christ 
gained for us. He only increases and perfects that work of Christ; 
just as the sun when shining on a field does not sow new seed, but 
develops that which is already sown. A grace is a favor granted to 
a person who has no claim to the favor. If a sovereign grants a re- 
prieve to a criminal under sentence of death, that reprieve is a grace. 
So, too, God acts with regard to man, granting Him numberless fa- 
vors without any merit on the part of man (Rom. iii. 24). These favors 
or graces may be temporal, such as health, riches, station ; or spiritual, 
such as forgiveness of our sins. It is with the latter class of favors 
that we are dealing now, and it was to secure these for us that Christ 
consented to die on the cross. 

3. Hence the assistance of the Holy Ghost is absolutely neces- 
sary for salvation. 



206 Faith, 

No mere natural act of a man can gain for him eternal salvation. 
The following illustration may help us. A little boy longs to reach 
some fruit on a tree; he stretches out his arms to the utmost, but 
the fruit is still out of reach; the child's father then lifts him up, 
so that he can pluck the fruit for himself. Thus man cannot attain 
salvation by his own efforts till the Holy Ghost gives him the super- 
natural strength. Just as the eye cannot discern distant objects 
without a telescope, and the arm cannot lift heavy weights without 
a lever, so the natural powers of man require supernatural help 
in order that salvation may be obtained. Hence the words of Christ : 
" Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Ghost, he can- 
not enter into the kingdom of God" (John iii. 5). 

Without the help of the Holy Grhost we cannot do the least 
work deserving of salvation. 

We can do nothing without God's help. " Our sufficiency is from 
God" (2 Cor. iii. 5). As St. Thomas Aquinas says, we are, since the 
Fall, like a sick man who cannot leave his bed without help. The fol- 
lowing may serve as illustrations. A man cannot work without 
light; thus too he cannot do any good work without the light of the 
Holy Ghost. The body is helpless unless animated by the soul ; in like 
manner man can do no good unless the Holy Spirit, Who is the life 
of the soul, come to his aid (St. Fulgentius). Oui* souls bring forth 
no fruit unless they are watered by the rain of the grace of the Holy 
Spirit (St. Hilary). As grace can do nothing witliout the co-operation 
of the will, so neither can the will achieve any result without grace. 
Compare the action of earth; it can produce no fruits without rain, 
and the rain cannot produce without the earth (St. John Chrysos- 
tom). As ink is required for the pen, so the grace of the Holy Ghost 
is necessary to inscribe the virtues in our souls (St. Thomas 
Aquinas). Every good work is the effect of two co-ordinate prin- 
ciples : the Holy Ghost and our own free will (1 Cor. xv. 10) ; we may 
compare the action of the schoolmaster who guides a boy's hand while 
he writes. Thus we can never ascribe the merit of our good works 
to ourselves. The earth does not bring forth flowers, but rather the 
sun by means of the earth. As we ascribe the activity of the body to 
the soul, so we should ascribe our good works to the grace of God. 
We might put down our good works to our own account with as much 
truth as a soldier might claim the victory without reference to his 
commander. 

With the help of the Holy Ghost we can carry out the most 

difficult works. 

St. Paul says : " I can do all in Him Who strengtheneth me " 
(Phil. iv. 13). 

2. ACTION OF THE HOLY GHOST. 

The jiTaces conferred by the Holy Ghost are as follows: 

1. He gives to all men actual ir^aces. 

2. He gives to some men sanctifying grace. 



The Apostles' Creed. 207 

3. He usually gives the seven special gifts, and occasionally 
quite extraordinary graces. 

4. He sustains and guides the Catholic Church. 

Actual Grace. 

1. The Holy Ghost influences our lives by enlightening the 
mind and strengthening the will. Such passing influence of the 
Holy Spirit is called " actual grace." 

Before Pentecost tlie apostles were still ignorant ; " slow of heart," 
as Our Lord expressed it (Luke xxiv. 25) ; the Holy Ghost in de- 
scending upon them enlightened their understanding and strength- 
ened their will; the fear which had caused them to keep in conceal- 
ment was now changed into undaunted courage. The fiery tongues 
symbolized the enlightenment of their minds, the whirlwind the 
strength which they received. The Holy Ghost is like the sun, 
giving light and warmth. When the sun begins to shine, the stars 
which were visible before begin to wane, and we see nothing in the 
firmament but the sun. When the Holy Ghost enlightens our souls 
we despise all earthly objects which formerly attracted our love, such 
as eating, drinking, playing, etc., and all our thoughts are turned 
towards God. Moreover the light of the sun reveals to us the true 
form of objects, the stones which we have gathered, the various roads 
before us. The light of the Holy Ghost shows us the true value of 
earthly things, our own sins, and the true goal of life. When the sun 
comes the ice begins to melt and the plants to blossom. So,, too, the 
Holy Ghost warms our hearts, stirring them with the love of God 
and of our neighbor, and helps us to do actions deserving of heaven. 
The Holy Ghost is therefore a light, descending from the Father of 
light ( Jas. i. 17) ; as St. Augustine says : " Actual grace is a light 
which enlightens and moves the sinner." 

There are many and various channels through which the 
Holy Ghost makes His influence act; for instance, sermons, the 
reading of good books, illness and death, the good example of 
others, religious pictures, the advice of superiors and friends, etc. 

The people were moved by the Holy Ghost at Pentecost when they 
heard the preaching of the apostles; so too St. Anthony the Hermit 
(356), on hearing a sermon on the rich young man; St. Ignatius of 
Loyola (1556), by the reading of the lives of the saints; St. Francis of 
Assisi (1226) during an illness; St. Francis Borgia (1572) on seeing 
the dead body of the Queen Isabella ; St. ISTorbert (1134) on seeing a 
death by lightning, etc., etc. In all these cases there was a sudden 
interior change, which the Holy Ghost took occasion of to speak to 
their hearts. All of them might have said with St. Cyprian : " When 
the Holy Ghost came into my heart, He changed me into another 
man." Often God sends us suffering, before the Holy Ghost speaks 
to us. Just as wax must be subjected to the flame and the stamp be- 
fore receiving an impression, so the heart of m.an must be softened by 
suffering in order to receive the impress of the Holy Spirit. Before 
paper can be used for writing, it must be prepared and finished; in a 



208 Faith, 

similar manner man must be purified from his evil desires before he 
is fit for the working of the Holy Ghost in his soul. 

2. The action of the Holy Spirit sometimes makes itself per- 
ceptible to the senses. 

For example, the appearance of the dove and the voice from 
heaven at the baptism of Christ, the fiery tongues and the rushing 
as of wind on Pentecost. We might reflect also how Christ instituted 
the Sacraments with forms appealing to the senses. 

3. The Holy Ghost does not force ns, but leaves us in perfect 
possession of our free will. 

The Holy Ghost is, as it were, a guide Whom men may follow 
or not as they list. He is the light proceeding from God, to which 
man can, if he will, close his eyes ; as St. Augustine says : " To obey 
the voice of God or not is left to a man's free will." God does not 
act upon us as if we were inanimate objects without intellect or free 
will. Man's freedom is very sacred to God, nor will He deprive him 
of it even when he uses it to his own perdition. In the words of St. 
Gertrude : " As God would not allow our great enemy to deprive us 
of our freedom, so neither would He take it from us Himself.'* 

Man can co-operate with actual grace or reject it (Ps. xciv. 
8). 

Saul of Tarsus co-operated with grace, the rich young man (Luke 
xviii. 18-25) rejected it. The people who on Pentecost reviled the 
apostles rejected grace (Acts ii. 13), as also those who mocked at St. 
Paul when he spoke to them on the Areopagus of the Gospel and the 
resurrection of the dead (Acts xvii. 32). Herod, too, when he heard 
of the birth of Christ from the Magi, failed to co-operate with grace. 
St. Francis de Sales draws an illustration from marriage: When a 
man wishes to marry he offers his hand to some suitable person, and 
that person may accept or reject the offer; thus God acts. He offers 
us His grace and we may accept it or reject it. Whoever constantly 
resists actual grace, and dies in that resistance is guilty of grave 
sin against the Holy Ghost, a sin which cannot be forgiven. Such 
a man resembles the devil, who is ever resisting the truth. 

Whoever co-operates with actual grace acquires greater 
graces; but he who resists loses other graces and must answer 
at the judgment for his obstinacy. 

The first grace, if responded to, brings with it a string of other 
graces. The servant who employed well his five talents received five 
talents more (Matt. xxv. 28). Hence the words of Christ: He that 
hath, to him shall be given and he shall abound (Matt. xxv. 29). 
The punishment which fell on the city of Jerusalem in a.T). 70 is a 
terrible example of the rejection of grace, because it did not know 
the time of its visitation (Luke xix. 44). To him who rejects grace 
apply those words of Christ: "The unprofitable servant cast ye ont 
into the exterior darkness. There shall be weeping and gnashing of 
teeth " (Matt. xxv. 30). It is an insult to a great lord to refuse his 



The Apostles' Creed. 209 

gifts, all the more if he be the Lord of heaven and earth and God 
Himself. He who rejects graces has as little chance of getting to 
heaven as the traveller of reaching his destination who should neg- 
lect to enter the train while it is in the station. The moment of 
actual grace is like the crisis of a sickness, when a little carelessness 
may cause death. Many people give a poor reception to the Holy Gh st 
when He comes to them on the occasion of a death, the reception 
of the sacraments, or the celebration of great feasts, by giving way to 
worldly distractions and following their inclinations. They should 
then seek solitude and time for recollection and prayer, or purify 
their souls from sin by confession. Thus acted St. Ignatius of Loy- 
ola when after his conversion he retired into the cave at Manresa; 
thus too St. Mary of Egypt who retired into the desert. " Sailors put 
out to sea," says Louis of Granada, " as soon as they see that a favor- 
able wind is blowing ; with like promptitude ought we to act when we 
feel the influence of the Holy Spirit." If we delay God will withdraw 
His graces, just as in the case of the Israelites. Those who failed 
to rise in the early morning to gather the manna found it had melted 
awaj^ after sunrise. " The greater the graces we receive," says St. 
Gregory the Great, " the greater is our responsibility." Christ's own 
words are : " Unto whomsoever much is given, of him much shall be 
required" (Luke xii. 48). 

4. The Holy Ghost acts on every man, on the sinner as well 
as on the just; and more on Catholics than on non-Catholics and 
unbelievers. 

God is the Good Shepherd (John x.). Who seeks the lost sheep till 
He finds it (Luke xv.). Christ, the Light of the world, enlightens 
every man that comes into the world (John i. 9). God's will is that 
all men be saved, and come to the knowledge of the truth (1 Tim. 
ii. 4). Besides all this God has a very special love for the souls of 
men. " My delight is to be with the children of men " (Prov. viii. 
31). 

The Holy Ghost was even from the beginning of the world 
active in promoting the salvation of mankind, but on Pente- 
cost He came into the world in a much more efficacious manner. 

While the Jews were in exile in Babylon, the Holy Ghost was 
working in the heathen by the many miracles which were wrought 
to demonstrate God's power; as in the incident of the three children 
in the furnace and Daniel in the lions' den. He was working not 
only in the patriarchs and nrophets, but even in heathens like Soc- 
rates (who taught the existence of one God, and for that reason was 
condemned to death in 399 B.C.). Just as the sunrise is preceded 
by the dawn, so the sun of justice, Christ, is preceded by the dawn of 
the Holy Ghost. 

The Holy Ghost does not distribute His gifts equally to all 
men; the members of the Catholic Church receive the richest 
share. 



310 Faith. 

One servant five talents, another two, and another one talent 
(Matt. XXV. 15). The Jews received more than the heathen; the 
blessed Mother of God more than all other men. The towns of Coro- 
zain and Bethsaida received more graces than Tyre and Sidon, Ca- 
pharnanm more than Sodom (Matt. xi. 21, 23). There are ordinary 
graces which are given to all men without distinction, and there are 
special graces which God grants only to a few souls, and that with a 
view to some special work. Many graces may be obtained, especially 
by the prayers of others and by co-operation with the first grace. 
St. Augustine received many more graces than other men in conse- 
quence of the prayers of St. Monica; so, too, St. Paul through the 
dying prayer of St. Stephen. The holy apostles obeyed the first call 
of Our Lord, and thus obtained many other graces. 

The action of tlie Holy Ghost on the souls of men is not 
constant, but occasional. 

Hence the exhortation of St. Paul : " Now is the acceptable time ; 
behold now is the day of salvation" (2 Cor. vi. 2). Compare the 
parable of the vineyard where the workmen received only one sum- 
mons (Matt. XX.). Times of special grace are the seasons of Lent or 
when a mission is being given, or the jubilee year. These times of 
grace are like the market-days when things are easier to obtain ; with 
this difference, that no money is required. " Come buy wine and milk, 
without money, and without any price" (Is. Iv. 1). 

5. Actual graces are obtained by the performance of good 
works, especially by prayer, fasting, and almsdeeds; and more 
especially by the use of the means of grace provided by the 
Church, by hearing of holy Mass, worthy reception of the sacra- 
ments, and attendance at sermons. 

God's grace cannot be merited by our own good works alone, other- 
wise it would not be grace (Kom. xi. 6), yet these good works are 
necessary, for, as St. Augustine says: " God, Who created us without 
our co-operation will not save us without our co-operation." N'ot 
according to the works which we have done but out of His mercy has 
God saved us (Tit. iii. 5). The Holy Ghost gives to each one as He 
wills (1 Cor. xii. 11), with regard, however, to the preparation and co- 
operation of each individual (Council of Trent, 6, 7). Hence it is 
that a man receives more actual gi-ace as he is richer in good works. 
In particular we know that prayer to the Holy Ghost is very effica- 
cious, for the Father in heaven gives the Holy Spirit to those who 
ask Him. Prayer to the Mother of God is also very efficacious: for 
she is " full of grace," and " the dispenser of all God's gifts." " Let 
no one," says St. Alphonsus, " consider this last title extravagant, 
for the greatest saints have so spoken of her, and the saints, as we 
know, were inspired by the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of truth." Prayer 
to the Blessed Sacrament also confers many graces. So, too, retire 
ment from the world, or the solitude in which God speaks to the heart 
(Osee ii. 14), and the mortification of the senses are excellent means 
of drawing down grace; a good example is found in the conduct of 
the apostles during the time preceding Pentecost. 



TJie Apostles' Creed 211 

Sanctifying Grace. 

1. When the sinner co-operates with actual ^ace, the Holy 
Ghost enters his soul and confers on it a brightness and beauty 
which claim the friendship of God. This indwelling beauty of 
the soul is due to the presence of the Holy Spirit and is called 
" sanctifying grace." 

Iron placed in a fire becomes heated, and glows like the fire itself; 
so the Holy Spirit, entering into a soul and dwelling there (1 Cor. 
vi. 19), gives it a new nature, a light and glory which we call " sanc- 
tifying grace." That God is drawn to men by their co-operation 
with His grace appears from God's own words : " Turn ye to Me. . . . 
and I will turn to you" (Zach. i. 3). Sanctifying grace is like a new 
garment, so it is represented by the wedding-garment and the parable 
of the supper (Matt, xxii.), and of the prodigal son (Luke xv.). " The 
soul acquires a great beauty by the presence of the Holy Spirit," says 
St. John Chrysostom. " He who enters into the state of grace, is like 
a man bowed down with infirmities and age, who, by a miracle, has 
been transformed into a beautiful youth dressed in purple and 
carrying a sceptre." " If," says Blosius, " the beauty of a soul in 
the state of grace could be seen, mankind would be transported with 
wonder and delight." . Just as a palace must be beautifully furnished 
when the king comes to dwell in it, so the soul of man must be made 
into a beautiful temple by the Holy Ghost before God can dwell in 
it. After the resurrection the appearance of the body will be deter- 
mined by that of the soul. " Let us therefore," says St. John Chry- 
sostom, " give all our care to the soul ; for this is the true interest of 
our bodies, which otherwise will perish with the soul." Sanctifying 
grace is not merely a gift of God (Council of Trent, 6, 11), but God 
gives us of His Spirit (1 John iv. 13). The Holy Ghost penetrates us 
through and through like fire; He is not in us merely like a ray of 
sunshine in a room. In consequence of this supernatural beauty 
the soul is enriched with the friendship of God. St. Mary Mag'da- 
lene of Pazzi says that if a man in the state of sanctifying grace 
knew how pleasing his soul is to God he would die of excess of joy. 
We are, in consequence of sanctifying grace, no longer the servants 
of God but His friends (John xv. 15). The expression "friendship" 
implies of itself a certain likeness; and this elevation from the state 
of sin to that of friendship with God is called " justification "• 
(Council of Trent, 6, 4), or regeneration (John iii. 5; Tit. iii. 4-7), 
or the putting off of the old man and the putting on of the new (Eph. 
iv. 22). Examples: As soon as David, Paul, and the prodigal son re- 
pented, they received the Holy Ghost and the gift of sanctifying 
grace ; otherwise they would never have accomplished their great sac- 
rifice. David and Saul spent many days in fasting and prayer, and 
the prodigal son faced the humiliation of returning to his father's 
roof. It is quite certain that whoever has perfect contrition receives 
the Holy Spirit even before confessing. Thus the patriarchs and 
prophets had sanctifying grace in consequence of their penitential 
spirit, and their belief in a Saviour. We know, too, that the Holy 
Spirit resides in some men even before Baptism, as in the case of the 



212 Faith. 

centurion Cornelius, and the people assembled in his house (Acts x. 
44). 

2. TJsually, however, the Holy Spirit makes His entry on the 
reception of the Sacraments of Baptism or Penance. 

The sinner under the action of the Holy Ghost begins to believe 
in God, to fear Him, to hope in Him, and love Him; then to bewail 
his sins, and finally decides to seek the means of grace in the Sacra- 
ments of Baptism or Penance. Then only is his conversion perfect. 
And actual experience goes to prove that Baptism or a general con- 
fession is in most sinners the beginning of a new life. Even in chil- 
dren their baptism is the beginning of a new spiritual life. 

3. When the Holy Spirit enters into us, He brings with Him 
a new spiritual life. 

God is the God of life, and His presence diffuses life. His pres- 
ence in our souls is like the presence of the soul in our bodies. Our 
souls have a natural life of their own, and by means of the intellect 
and the will learn to appreciate the true, the beautiful, and the good. 
But this natural life, compared with the life imparted by God, is like 
the statue compared to its living original. This divine life is acquired 
by the soul when the Holy Spirit takes possession of the soul with 
His grace, and it enables the soul to know, love, and enjoy God ; this 
is the supernatural life. Just as Elias (3 Kings xvii.) and Eliseus (4 
Kings iv.) restored the dead children to life by measuring their 
bodies over that of the child, mouth to mouth, hand to hand, member 
to member, so does the Holy Ghost breathe the divine life into us, 
giving us to see with His sight, to work with His power; and thus 
our soul is born to a new life (1 Pet. i. 3, 4). Grace is, in the words 
of Our Saviour, " a fountain of water springing into life everlast- 
ing" (John iv. 14). "A heavenly seed is sown in us," says St. Peter 
Chrysologus, " destined to spring up to everlasting life. We are of a 
heavenly family, and Our Eather is throned in heaven. See to what 
heights grace has raised thee ! " While our bodies decay from day to 
day, our souls become daily more full of the strength of youth by vir- 
tue of grace (2 Cor. iv. 16). Even in our bodies God's grace lays the 
germ of everlasting life : " And if the spirit of Him that raised up 
Jesus from the dead, dwell in you; He that raised up Jesus Christ 
from the dead shall quicken also your mortal bodies, because of His 
spirit that dwelleth in you" (Rom. viii. 11). 

The following are some of the effects of the Holy Spirit 
when He acts upon us by His grace: 

1. He purifies us from all mortal sin. 

As metals are purified by fire from their dross, so are our souls 
cleansed of their sins when penetrated by the fire of the Holy Spirit. 
Sanctifying grace and mortal sin are incompatible. The Holy Spirit 
dwells in all who are free from mortal sin, and the evil spirit in 
those who are guilty of mortal sin. Although the grace of God brings 
a cure to the soul of man, it does not cure the body; in his flesh is left 
the remains of sin, or concupiscence. Thus in great saints even, 
there remains the inclination to evil against which must be waged a 



The Apostles' Creed. 213 

lifelong struggle. Hence the words of St. Paul : " I know that there 
dwelleth not in me, that is to say, in my flesh, that which is good" 
(Kom. vii. 18). " Concupiscence," says St. Augustine, "may be les- 
sened in this life but not destroyed." It remains with us as an object 
lesson of the deadly effects of sin, and to give occasion, by our resist- 
ance to it, of gaining merit in heaven. 

2. He unites us to God and makes us into temples of God. 

He who has the Holy Spirit is united with Christ, like the 
branches with the vine (John xv. 5). In the words of St. Gregory 
Nazianzen, our nature is united with God by the virtue of the Holy 
Ghost, like a drop of water poured into a measure of wine ; it acquires 
the color, the taste, and the smell of the wine. The Holy Spirit 
makes us sharers of the divine nature (2 Pet. i. 4). "By the action 
of the Holy Spirit," says St. Thomas Aquinas, *' we are transformed 
into gods " ; and St. Maximus : " The Godhead is conferred on us with 
grace," and " As iron glows when heated in the fire, so is man 
changed by the Holy Spirit into the Godhead" (St. Basil; St. 
Thomas Aquinas). Hence men are often called gods (John x. 34; 
pp. Ixxxi. 6). Lucifer and the first man wished to be as God, but 
independently of Him. God wills that we should strive to be as He is, 
but in union with Him. The presence of the Holy Ghost makes us 
temples of God. " The Holy Spirit," says St. Augustine, " dwells 
primarily in the soul, and gives it its true life ; and since the soul is 
in the body, the Holy Ghost dwells therefore in our bodies." St. 
Paul insists on this point : " Kjiow you not that you are the temple of 
God, and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you ? " (1 Cor. iii. IG) ; 
" You are the temple of the living God " (2 Cor. vi. 16). In the Our 
Father we say " Our Father, Who art in heaven " ; " the heaven," 
says St. Augustine, " is the just man on earth, because God dwells 
in him." Christ Himself said that the Father and He would take up 
their abode with the man who loves Christ (John xiv. 23). 

3. He illumines the mind, and makes the divine and moral 
precepts possible. 

He strengthens our faculties of the intellect and will, just as a ray 
of sunlight passing through a crystal turns it into a mass of light. 
More especially does He give the light of faith (2 Cor. iv. 6), and 
kindle the fire of divine love (Rom. v. 5). In short He gives the three 
tlieological virtues (Council of Trent, 6, 7). He also makes us able 
and willing to co-operate with the inspirations of the Holy Spirit; 
that is. He gives us the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost. Just as iron 
softens in the fire, so the soul of man under the influence of the 
Holy Spirit is inclined to good works; this we see exemplified in St. 
Paul, for hardly had the Holy Ghost acted upon him when he asks: 
"Lord, what wilt Thou that I do ? " (Acts ix. 6.) Through this in- 
clination of the will towards what is good, the moral virtues are pres- 
ent as possibilities; practice is all that is required to make them 
facts. Thus the whole spiritual life is changed, and we see how far 
apart is the inner life of a saint and that of a worldling. The latter 
thinks only of his own satisfaction in eating, drinking, the pursuit of 
.•'.mbition a^^d pleasure; in short, he loves the world. The man in 



214 Faitn. 

whom the Holy Spirit dwells, directs his thoughts for the most part 
to God and tries to please Him; that is, he lovei God. He can say 
with St. Paul, " I live, now not I ; but Christ liveth in me " (Gal. ii. 
20). Such a man despises the things of this world, and whatever be 
his sufferings he enjoys peace from within and unspeakable consola- 
tion; for the Holy Ghost is the Comforter (John xiv. 26). 

4. He gives us true peace. 

Through Him man acquires the peace which surpasses all under- 
standing (Phil. iv. 7). The man who has the light of the Holy 
Ghost in him is like a traveller performing his journey in sunshine 
and fair weather; quite otherwise is the case of him from whom 
that light is cut off by the clouds of sin; he is like the unwilling 
traveller, forced to make his way through wind and storm. 

5. He becomes our Teacher and Guide. 

He instructs us in the teachings of the Catholic Church. The 
unction which we have received from Him teacheth us of all things 
(1 John ii. 27). Whoever has not the Holy Ghost may indeed study 
the truths of the Christian religion, but their significance escapes 
him; it is an unfruitful knowledge. Just as a book cannot be read 
in the dark without the help of a light, so the Word of God is unintel- 
ligible without light from the Holy Ghost. Though it is quite true 
that whatever the Holy Ghost imparts to us is free from error, yet 
we require to be certain that what we have received is indeed 
imparted by the Holy Spirit. Hence, no matter what a man's lights 
may be, he must keep fast hold of the teaching of the Church; and 
whoever fails to do this has not the Holy Spirit in him (1 John iv. 
6). The Holy Ghost is our Guide, " leading us," says Louis of Gran- 
ada, " as a father who leads his child by the hand over a difficult 
path." Those who are in the grace of God are led in a special 
manner. Such can say : " JSTo longer do I live, but Christ lives in me." 
It is in this manner that the just have the kingdom of God within 
them (Luke xvii. 21). 

6. He inspires us to do good works and makes them meri- 
torious for the kingdom of heaven. 

Just as the Holy Spirit brooded over the waters of the deep, and 
created plants, animals, and men, so too does He hover over the souls 
of men, bringing forth fruits that are to last forever. As the flower 
expands when touched by the sun, so is the heart of the most hard- 
ened sinner expanded by the grace of the Holy Spirit, and breathes 
out the perfume of virtue and piety. The Holy Ghost is ever active, 
like fire, and always inciting to good works. As the wind keeps the 
windmill ever in motion, so the Holy Spirit is ever moving the heart 
of man. And He makes our actions meritorious. As the soul raises 
our ordinary and merely animal operations to the level of rational 
and intellectual acts, so the Holy Ghost elevates the acts of our soul 
to a supernatural and divine plane. The Holy Ghost is, as it were, 
the gardener of our souls. A gardener grafts a good branch on to 
an uncultivated stock, which then brings forth sweet fruit, in place of 
its former sour and poor fruit; so the Holy Ghost engrafts upon us 



The Apostles* Creed. 215 

a branch from Christ, the tree of life, and we bear no longer our 
merely natural fruit, but supernatural. When we are in the state 
of grace, we are the branches united with the vine, Jesus Christ 
(John XV. 4). Good works done in the state of mortal sin obtain for 
us only actual graces to help towards our conversion. 

1. He makes us children of God and heirs of heaven. 

When the Holy Ghost enters our souls it is with us as with Christ 
at His baptism, when the Holy Spirit descended upon Him; God 
the Father receives us as His well-beloved children, and the heavens 
are opened to us; we have no longer the spirit of slavery, but the 
spirit of adoption of sons whereby we cry " Abba, Father " (Rom. 
viii. 15). All who are led by the Spirit of God are the sons of God 
(Rom. viii. 14). If we are sons of God, we are also heirs : heirs indeed 
of God, joint heirs with Christ (Rom. viii. 17), for children have a 
claim to their heritage from their parents. " We know if our earthly 
house of this habitation be dissolved that we have a building of God, 
a house not made with hands, eternal in heaven" (2 Cor. v. 1). The 
Holy Spirit will remain with us forever (John xiv. 16). "To be 
numbered among the sons of God," says St. Cyprian, " is the highest 
nobility." Such is man's privilege when in the state of grace, but 
like the uncut diamond, all the glory of his soul is not yet visible. 
Well might David cry out : " Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice, ye 
just " (Ps. xxxi. 11). He who has the Holy Spirit has the greatest of 
kingdoms, the kingdom of God in himself (Luke xvii. 21). Alas ! 
that so many men should neglect this, their privilege, and give them- 
selves up to the lusts of their flesh, the food of worms. 

4. Sanctifying grace is secured and increased by doing good 
works and using the means of grace offered by the Church; it is 
lost by a single mortal sin. 

Sanctifying grace can always be increased in the soul : " He that 
is just let him be justified still; and he that is holy, let him be 
sanctified still" (Apoc. xxii. 11). By good works the sanctifying 
grace which we have received may be confirmed and increased in us 
(Council of Trent, 6, 26). Thus, for example, St. Stephen was a 
man "full of the Holy Spirit" (Acts vi. 5). Stones and weeds pre- 
vent the sun from reaching the earth and giving it increase; so do 
our sins hinder the Holy Ghost from acting on our souls ; hence they 
must be removed by the sacraments of confession and communion; 
and as the soil must be prepared, so must our souls be nourished with 
the teaching of Christ in order to receive the action of the Holy 
Ghost. This was the case even with the apostles. One mortal sin 
is enough to rob us of sanctifving grace, for it is by mortal sin only 
that the soul is separated entirely from God. " God never deserts 
him who has once been sanctified by His grace, unless He Himself 
be first deserted." Hence the warning of the Apostle : " Extinguish 
not the Spirit" (1 Thess. v. 19). In the instant of committing 
mortal sin, storm clouds arise between God, the Smi of justice, and 
our souls, the brightness of which is at once extinguishod. With the 
departure of the Holy Ghost are united the darkening of the under- 
standing and the weakening of the will. " When the sun goes down," 



216 Faith. 

says Louis of Granada, " the eye is darkened and can no longer make 
out objects. So when the light of the Holy Ghost is taken from the 
soul, it is filled with darkness, and loses the knowledge of the truth." 
Whoever has lost sanctifying grace can recover it by means of the 
Sacrament of Penance, but not without an earnest effort; for the 
wicked spirit has entered into such a man and has taken with him 
seven more spirits more wicked than himself (Matt. xii. 45). It is 
impossible for those who were once illuminated and are fallen away 
to be renewed again to penance (Heb. vi. 4-6). 

5. He who has not sanctifying grace is spiritually dead and 
will suffer eternal ruin. 

St. Augustine says that as the body without the soul is dead, so 
the soul without the grace of the Holy Spirit is dead for heaven. 
He who has not the Holy Ghost sits " in darkness and in the 
shadow of death " (Luke i. 79) ; he cannot understand the things of 
the Spirit, for they are to him foolishness (1 Cor. ii. 14). He who has 
not on the wedding-garment, that is, sanctifying grace, is cast into 
outer darkness (Matt. xxii. 12). And as the branch which is not 
united to the vine withers and is cast into the fire, so is he cast off 
who does not remain united to Christ by His grace (John xv. 6). If 
any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is not of Christ (Rom. 
viii. 9). 

6. No one knows for certain whether he have sanctifying 
grace or will receive it at the hour of death. 

Man knows not whether he is worthy of love or hatred (Eccles. ix. 
1). Even St. Paul says of himself: " I am not conscious to myself of 
anything, yet am I not hereby justified" (1 Cor. iv. 4). Solomon 
even became an idolater before his death; and St. Bernard warns 
us : " Even if a man have the light of grace and the love of God, let 
him remember that he is still under the open sky and not in the 
house, and that a breeze may put out this holy light forever." " We 
carry our treasure in earthen vessels" (2 Cor. iv. T), and in the 
words of Theophylact, " Our hearts are like earthen vessels, easily 
broken and prone to spill the water in them ; so may the Holy Spirit 
be lost by one sin." No wonder St. Paul warns us : " Work out your 
salvation in fear and trembling" (Phil. ii. 12). We may indeed have 
confidence that we are in the grace of God, but without a special 
revelation we cannot have absolute certainty (Council of Trent, 6, 6). 
It may be surmised from the good works which a man does that he 
is in the grace of God, for an evil tree cannot bring forth good fruit 
(Matt. vii. 18). 

The Seven Gifts of the Holy Ghost and the Extraordinary 

Graces. 

1. The Holy Ghost gives to all who have sanctifying grace 
the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit, that is, se^ren virtues of the 
soul, by which it easily responds to His light and inspirations. 

The light of the sun is split up into seven distinct colors, and 
the seven-branched candlestick in the Temple was a type of the seven 



The Apostles* Creed, 217 

gifts. These seven gifts embrace the four cardinal virtues. They 
remove entirely the barriers which divide us from God, especially by 
subjecting our concupiscence to the dictates of reason (St. Thomas 
Aquinas). The seven gifts give us a definite movement towards God; 
they perfect the powers of our souls, so that the Holy Ghost can 
easily move them. Just as teaching in the elementary school prepares 
the scholar for higher forms of instruction, so the seven gifts pre- 
pare the soul for the higher influence of the Holy Ghost. The three 
theological virtues are higher than the seven gifts, because the latter 
only give us a movement towards God, while the former unite us 
intimately with Him. These gifts are lost by mortal sin, but are 
increased as one advances in perfection. Confirmation also increases 
these gifts. 

The seven gifts of the Holy Spirit are : Wisdom, under- 
standing, knowledge, counsel, fortitude, piety, and the fear of 
God. 

The first four enlighten the understanding, the others strengthen 
the will. These gifts are enumerated by Isaias as belonging to the 
Redeemer of mankind (Is. xi. 2). 

1. The gift of wisdom enables us to recognize the emptiness 
of earthly things, and to regard God as the highest good. 

St. Paul counts all that the world loves and admires for loss 
(Phil. iii. 8). Solomon, after tasting of the joys of this world calls 
them "vanities" (Eccles. i. 2). St. Ignatius of Loyola used often 
to exclaim : " Oh ! how poor are the things of earth when I look at the 
heavens." Compare, too, the prayer of St. Francis of Assisi, " My 
'^od and my all." 

2. The gift of understanding enables us to distinguish 
Catholic teaching from all other doctrine, and to rest in it. 

Blessed Clement Hofbauer, the apostle of Vienna (a.d. 1820), 
though he began his studies very late in life, and had only just 
enough knowledge of theology to be ordained, was often consulted 
by the dignitaries of the Church on the accuracy of the doctrine 
taught in the books passing through the press. A very short exam- 
ination enabled him to detect at once what was unsound. St. Cath- 
arine of Alexandria (a.d. 307), reduced some fifty ppgan doctors to 
silence, and made them into Christians. Our Lord's own promise 
was : " I will give you a mouth and wisdom which all your adver- 
saries shall not be able to resist and gainsay" (Luke xxi. 15). 

3. The gift of knowledge enables us to obtain a clear grasp 
of the teaching of the Catholic Church without special study. 

The Cure of Ars had done but little study, yet hx3 sermons were 
•so remarkable that even bishops were eager to hear them, and mar- 
velled at his knowledge. St. Thomas Aquinas used to say that he 
learned more at the foot of the altar than out of books; and St. 
Ignatius of Loyola declared that he had learned more in the cave at 
-Manresa than all the doctors in the world could teach him. How did 



218 Faifh. 

the old man Simeon know that the child in the Temple was the 
Messias (Lnke ii. 34) ? Were not the apostles, after the coming ol 
the Holy Ghost, " endowed with power from on high " (Luke xxiv. 
49) ? Was not St. Paul rapt into paradise to hear words such as 
no man had heard (2 Cor. xii. 4) ? 

4. The gift of counsel enables us to know under difficult 
circumstances what the will of God is. 

We might recall the answer made by Christ to the question 
whether tribute should be paid to Caesar (Matt. xxii. 21), and the 
judgment of Solomon (3 Kings iii.). Our Lord, when warning the 
apostles of the persecutions awaiting them, had said, " Be not solic- 
itous how you shall answer or what you shall say ; for the Holy Ghost 
shall teach you in the same hour what you must say" (Luke xii. 
11, 12). 

5. The gift of fortitude enables us to bear courageously 
whatever is necessary in carrying out God's will. 

St. John IsTepomucene (1393) chose rather to be imprisoned, tor- 
tured with hot irons, and finally cast into the Moldau, rather than 
betray the secret of the confessional. Job was patient in spite of the 
loss of his property, his children, and his health, and in spite of the 
mockery of his wife and friends. Abraham was ready to sacrifice 
his only son. The gift of fortitude is especially prominent in the 
holy martyrs, and most of all in Our Lady, the Queen of martyrs. 
" She herself," says St. Alphonsus, " would have nailed her Son to the 
cross had such been God's will; for she possessed the gift of forti- 
tude in a higher degree than Abraham." 

6. The gift of piety enables us to make continual efforts to 
honor God more and more in our hearts, and to carry out His 
will more perfectly. 

St. Teresa took a vow always to choose what was most perfect, and 
St. Alphonsus never to waste time. St. Aloysius would spend hours 
in presence of the Blessed Sacrament, till his confessor had to com- 
mand him to shorten his devotions. Many of the saints used to melt 
into tears during their prayer or in meditating on heavenly subjects. 

7. The gift of the fear of God enables us to fear giving 
offence to God more than all the evils in the world. 

Such was the gift, for instance, of the three children in the fur- 
nace, and of all the martyrs. It enables us to overcome the fear of 
man and human respect. 

2r The Holy Ghost gives to many graces of a rarer kind; for 
instance, the gift of tongues, of miracles, of prophecy, of dis- 
cernment of spirits, of visions, of ecstasies, etc. 

The apostles received on the feast of Pentecost the gift of 
tongues, and we find it recorded also in the life of St. Francis Xavier, 
as having been possessed by him. The prophets of the Old Law fore- 
told future events. St. Peter knew the thoughts of Ananias. St. 



The Apostles' Creed. 219 

Catharine of Sienna after communion used to be raised in the air 
and rapt out of her senses. St. Francis of Assisi received the stig- 
mata, or impression on his body of the sacred wounds of Our Lord. 
Instances of all these gifts occur again and again in the lives of the 
saints, and are, after all, only the fulfilment of the promise of Our 
Lord in Mark xvi. 17, 18. These graces are conferred by the Holy 
Ghost on whom He will (1 Cor. xii. 11). Louis of Granada beauti- 
fully expresses it : " As the sun shines on the flowers, and brings out 
their various perfumes, so does the light of the Holy Spirit fall on 
pious souls, according to their peculiarities, and develops in them His 
graces and gifts." 

These extraordinary graces are conferred by the Holy Ghost 
generally for the benefit of others and in aid of His Church. 

The time of the apostles was conspicuous for extraordinary gifts 
(1 Cor. xii.-xiv.). "God is like a gardener," says St. Gregory the 
Great, " who waters the flowers only while they are young." Extraor- 
dinary graces ought to be used with due discretion for the benefit 
of others (1 Cor. xiv. 12). In the words of St. Irenseus, " A merchant 
does not leave his money idle in his chests, but he makes the best use 
he can of it in business; so God's will is that His graces should not 
be left unemployed, but that men should make good use of them." 
These extraordinary gifts of themselves do not make men better. 
Th<^y are indeed great graces, available for great good, and are the 
free gift of God, like riches, health, etc. Hence the words of St. 
Teresa : " iSs'ot for all the goods and joys of this world would I give up 
a single one of the graces given me ; I esteemed them always as a sin- 
gular gift of God and a very great treasure." It is the right use 
of these gifts, and not the gifts themselves, which make them of serv- 
ice to man. St. Fulgentius writes : " One may have the gift of mir- 
acles, and yet lose his soul. Miracles give no certainty of one's 
salvation." Nor are these extraordinary graces a sign of holiness in 
the possessor of them ; Our Lord's own words convey this in Matthew 
vii. 22. Yet there is no saint of the Church who has not had these 
gifts. Benedict XIV. says : " They are, as a rule, given not to sinners 
but to the just. When they are found in union with heroic virtue in a 
man, they are a strong proof of his sanctity." These gifts are usually 
accompanied by great sufferings, such as desolation of spirit, strug- 
gles with the devil, sickness, persecutions, etc. 

3. The gifts of the Holy Spirit were conspicuous in a special 
degree in Jesus Christ (Acts x. 38), His holy Mother, the apostles, 
the patriarchs and prophets of the Old Law, and all the saints of 
the Catholic Church. 

The Holy Ghost as Guide of the Church. 
The Holy Ghost maintains and guides the Catholic Church. 

As the soul is to the body, so is the Holy Ghost to the Catholic 
Church, and, like the soul, His action is invisible. He is the Archi- 
tect of the Church; His action produced the Incarnation (Luke i. 
35) ; He exercised His powers through the humanity of Christ (Luke 



220 Faith, 

iv. 18; Acts x. 38) ; He perfects the Church founded by the Redeemer 
(Eph. ii. 20-22). 

1. The Holy Spirit secures the Catholic Church from de- 
struction (Matt. xvi. 18), and preserves it from error (John xiv. 
16). 

2. The Holy Ghost supports the rulers of the Church in the 
duties of their office (Acts xx. 28), and especially the Vicar of 
Christ, the Pope. 

The Holy Ghost gives to them what they shall say (Matt. x. 19). 
He speaks through them as on Pentecost He spoke through the 
apostles (Matt. x. 20). In the words of St. Basil: "As the pen 
writes what the writer wishes, so the preacher of the Gospel speaks 
nothing of his own but what the Holy Spirit gives to him." 

3. The Holy Ghost raises up in times of danger for the 
Church able champions of her cause. 

For example St. Athanasius (a.d. 373) in the time of the Arians ; 
the holy Pope Gregory VII. (a.d. 1085) when the Church was in gen- 
eral disorder; St. Dominic (a.d. 1221) at the time of the Albigenses; 
St. Catharine of Sienna (a.d. 1380), at the time of the great Papal 
schism; St. Ignatius of Loyola (a.d. 1556) at the time of Luther. 

4. The Holy Ghost is the cause that there are so many saints 
in the Church in all ages. 

Almost every year new saints are canonized in Rome. 



3. APPARITIONS OF THE HOLY 0H08T, 

The Holy Ghost has appeared under the form of a dove, of 
fire, and of tongues, to signify His office in the Church. 

" The Holy Ghost," says St. Gregory the Great, " appeared in the 
form of a dove and of fire, because His work is done gently and zeal- 
ously, and whoever is wanting in gentleness and zeal is not under His 
influence. He appeared in the form of tongues, because He gives to 
man the gift of speech, by which he may inflame others to the love of 
God." The Holy Ghost appeared under the form of fire, because He 
consumes the dross of our sins, drives the darkness of ignorance out 
of our souls, melts the icy coldness of our hearts, and inflames us with 
love of God and of our neighbor, and because He hardens and 
strengthens the heart of man whom He has made from the clay of the 
earth. " Our God is a consuming fire " (Heb. xii. 29.) 



Tlie Apostles' Creed. 221 



NINTH AETICLE OF THE CKEED : THE CATHOLIC 

CHUECH. 

1. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH AND ITS INSTITUTION. 

1. The Catholic Church is a visible institution, founded by 
Christ, in which men are trained for heaven. 

The Church may be compared with a school ; the latter prepares its 
pupils to become good citizens of the State, the former trains up 
citizens of heaven. And just as a school has its head master, its staff 
of teachers, its pupils, along with its regulations for discipline, and 
appliances of education, so is the Church provided. It has a visible 
head, the visible ceremony of Baptism by which members are re- 
ceived, and a visible formula of belief. Hence Christ compares the 
Church with visible objects, with a city placed on a mountain, with 
a light on a candlestick; it is also called a body (Eph. i. 22), the house 
of God (1 Tim. iii. 15), a holy city (Apoc. xxi. 10). Wherever 
Catholic priests and Catholics are to be found, there is the Catholic 
Church. Two classes of people maintain that the Church is not 
visible: heretics, who have been cut off from it yet would gladly 
belong to the Church, and free thinkers, who wish to shirk the obliga- 
tion of obeying a visible Church. The expression " Catholic Church " 
does not imply a mere building of stone or wood, though the com- 
parison is frequently made in the Scriptures (Eph. ii. 21), the 
Church having a living corner-stone, Christ (Ps. cxvii. 22) Who 
binds the faithful into one divine family, and the foundation-stones 
of the apostles (Apoc. xxi. 14), the faithful being the stones of the 
edifice (1 Pet. ii. 5). Nor by " Catholic Church " do we mean " Cath- 
olic religion ; " the Church is to the religion as the body to the 
soul. 

The Catholic Church is often called the " kingdom of 
heaven/' " kingdom of God/' " community of the faithful.'' 

John the Baptist and Christ Himself announced that the kingdom 
of heaven w^as at hand (Matt. iii. 2; iv. 17). The parables on the 
kingdom of heaven bring out the various features of the Church. 
The gradation of offices in the Church — (Pope, cardinals, bishops, 
priests, ordinary Christians), is very suggestive of a kingdom, in 
which the aim is to lead men to lieaven. " The Church is the people 
of God scattered through the world," says St. Augustine; or in the 
words of St. Thomas Aquinas, the community of the faithful. Our 
Lord compares it with a fold where He wishes to keep all His sheep. 

The Church is very properly called the " Mother of Chris- 
tians/' because she gives to men the true life of the soul, and 
\)ecause she trains her members as a mother brings up her 
children. 

The Church confers in Baptism the gift of sanctifying graoe, 
the true life of the soul, for this grace gives a claim to heaven. As 



222 Faith, 

the father who goes away on a journey leaves all his power in the 
hands of the mother, so Christ, in leaving this earth, gave His Church 
full power (John xx. 21). "We should love God as Our Father," 
says St. Augustine, " and the Church as our Mother." " If we love 
our native land so dearly," says Leo XIII., " because we were born 
and bred there, and are ready even to die for it, how much deeper 
should be our love for the Church, which has given us the life which 
has no end." 

2. The Church prepares man for heaven by carrying out the 
threefold office which Christ conferred upon her; the office of 
teacher, of priest, and of shepherd. 

The Church teaches the doctrine of Christ, ministers the means of 
grace appointed by Christ, and is a guide and shepherd to the faith- 
ful. The teaching is carried on by sermons ; the means of grace con- 
sist in the holy sacrifice of the Mass, the sacraments, blessings, and 
the holding of special devotions; the guidance consists in the laying 
down of certain precepts, e.g., the commandments of the Church, 
and the prohibition of what is sinful or dangerous, e.g., the reading 
of bad books. 

This triple office was first exercised by Christ, and then 
passed on to the apostles and their successors. 

Christ used to preach, as we see in the sermon on the mount. He 
dispensed the means of grace, forgiving Magdalen her sins, giving 
His body and blood to the apostles at the Last Supper, blessing the 
little children. Christ was the Guide of men. He gave command- 
ments, sent the apostles on missions, instructed them, and reproved 
the tyranny of the Pharisees, etc. He gave the apostles commission 
(1), to teach all nations (Matt, xxviii. 19), and also (2), to exercise 
the power of the priesthood, to offer sacrifice (Luke xxii. 19), and to 
forgive sins (John xx. 23) ; (3), in addition the apostles received the 
office of pastor, and with it the power of reproving and correcting 
(Matt, xviii. 17), and of binding and loosing, i.e., of making and re- 
voking laws. The words of Christ included the successors of the 
apostles as well as the apostles themselves : " I am with you all days, 
even to the consummation of the world " (Matt, xxviii. 20). 

3. The Lord and King of the Church is Christ. 

The prophets had foretold (Ps. ii.), that the Messias should be a 
great king, whose kingdom should last forever and embrace all other 
kingdoms. The archangel Gabriel told Mary that the Redeemer 
should be a king and His kingdom should be eternal (Luke i. 33). 
Christ calls Himself a king to Pilate, but denies that His kingdom 
is of this world (John xviii. 36). Christ directs the Church through 
the Holy Ghost; hence He is called the Head of the Church (Eph. 
i. 23), of which Christians form the body, each one being a member 
of the body (1 Cor. xii. 27). He is also called the invisible Head, 
because He no longer mixes personally with man on earth. On ac- 
count of His love for the Church, He is called her Bridegroom, and 
she is called His Bride (Apoc. xxi. 9). Christ compared Himself to 
1% bridegroom on several occasions (Matt. xxii.). Like Jacob, who 



The Apostles' Creed, 223 

served seven years for Rachel, Christ would serve many years for His 
Church (Phil. ii. 7), and even gave His life for it (Eph. v. 25). 

4. The Catholic Church consists of a teaching and a hearing 
body. To the former belong the Pope, bishops, and priests ; to the 
latter the faithful. 

The word "Pope" conies from the Latin papa^ i.e., father; 
"bishop" is from the Greek episcopos, i.e., overseer; priest is from 
the Greek word presbyter , meaning " the elder." In Latin, priest is 
sacerdos. 

2. THE HEAD OF TEE CHURCH, 

The mainstay of the Church is the Pope. He is the rock on which 
the Church rests (Matt. xvi. 18) ; and hi: office secures the mainte- 
nance of unity. St. John Chrysostom says that the Church would 
fail if it were not for its Head, who is the centre of its unity, as a 
ship would be wrecked if deprived of its pilot; and St. Cyprian adds 
that the enemies of the Church direct their attacks against its Head, 
in the hope that deprived of his guidance it may be shipwrecked. 
Among the Popes are counted no less than forty martyrs. 

1. Christ conferred on St. Peter the primacy over the apostles 
and the faithful by the command : " Feed My lambs, feed My 
sheep ; " by giving over to him " the keys of the kingdom of 
heaven," and by special marks of distinction. 

After His resurrection Christ appeared to the apostles on the lake 
of Genesareth, and after the triple question to Peter " Lovest thou 
Me ? " gave him the solemn precept : " Feed My lambs ; [i.e., the 
faithful], . . . feed My sheep [i.e., the apostles] " (John xxi. 15). 
This office had been promised to St. Peter before the resurrection, 
on the occasion of his confession at Csesarea Philippi : " Thou art 
Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church and the gates of hell 
shall not prevail against it. And I will give to thee the keys of the 
kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, 
it shall be bound in heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt loose upon 
earth it shall be loosed also in heaven" (Matt. xvi. 18, 19). The 
special marks of distinction conferred on St. Peter were the follow- 
ing: Christ gave him a new name, Peter; He chose him to be with 
Him on the most solemn occasions, as on Mount Thabor and in the 
Garden of Olives; He appeared to St. Peter after His resurrection 
before showing Himself to any of the other apostles (Luke xxiv. 34; 
1 Cor. XV. 5, etc.). 

St. Peter always acted as chief of the apostles and was so 
acknowledged by them. 

He spoke in the name of the other apostles on Pentecost; he re- 
ceived into the Church its first Jewish and Gentile members; he 
performed the first miracle ; it was he who moved for the choice of a 
new apostle; he defended the apostles before the Jewish tribunal; 
his opinion prevailed at the council of the apostles. The apostles rec- 
ognized his pre-eminence, for the Evangelists in giving the list of the 



234 Faith, 

apostles always place St. Peter first (Matt. x. 2 ; Mark i. 36 ; Acts ii. 
14) ; and St. Paul, after his conversion, regarded it as his duty to 
present himself to St. Peter (Gal. i. 18; ii. 2). 

2. St. Peter was Bishop of Rome for some twenty-five years 
and died Bishop of Rome; and the dignity and power of St. Peter 
descended to the succeeding Bishops of Rome. 

There is a great amount of evidence for the presence of St. Peter 
in Eome from the year 44 to 69. St. Peter writes about the year 65 : 
"The Church that is in Babylon . . . saluteth you; and so doth 
my son Mark" (1 Pet. v. 13). Babylon was the name given by the 
early Christians to Rome, on account of its greatness and immorality. 
St. Clement of Eome writes about the year 100: "Peter and Paul 
were with an enormous number of the Christians martyred in Rome." 
Tertullian, a priest of Carthage, about the year 200, congratulates the 
Church of Rome, because St. Peter died there, crucified like his Lord, 
and St. Paul died like another John the Baptist. In addition the 
grave of St. Peter was long ago discovered; his body lay in a cata- 
comb under Nero's circus ; the third Pope erected a small chapel over 
it, to be replaced by a beautiful edifice built by Constantine (324) ; 
when this fell into disrepair, the present building of St. Peter's was 
erected, in 1629. 

The Bishops of Rome have always exercised supreme power 
in the Church, and that power has always been acknowledged. 

When dissensions arose in the Church of Corinth about the year 
100, the matter was referred not to the apostle St. John at Ephesus, 
but to the Bishop of Rome, St. Clement. About the year 190 the Pope 
Victor commanded the people of Asia Minor to conform to the 
Roman usage in the celebration of Easter, and those who demurred 
were threatened with excommunication, whereupon they yielded. 
About the year 250 Pope Stephen forbade the Bishops of North 
Africa to rebaptize those who returned to the bosom of the Church, 
and excommunicated those who resisted. The Bishops of Rome had 
the first place in all general councils. When heresy broke out the 
Bishop of Rome always inquired into it ; and to him other bishops ap- 
pealed when unjustly oppressed; thus when St. Athanasius was de- 
posed by the emperor, the Pope reinstated him. From the earliest 
times the titles " high priest " and " bishop of bishops " have been 
given to the Bishop of Rome. When, at the Council of Chalcedon, the 
letter of Pope Leo was read to the assembled bishops, they cried out 
with one voice : " Peter has spoken by Leo ; let him be anathema who 
believes otherwise." The Vatican Council declares that it is the will 
of Christ that till the end of the world there be successors to St. 
Peter. 

3. The Bishop of Rome is called Pope, or Holy Father. 

Lie is also called, on account of his great dignity, the " holy 
Father," ^^ His Holiness," ^^ Vicar of Christ," "Father of 
Christendom." 

On account of the opening words of Christ's speech to St. Peter 



The Apostles' Greed, 225 

•^ Blessed art thou," etc. (Matt. xvi. 17) the Pope is addressed as 
Beatissime Pater. The office is called the See of Peter, the Holy See, 
or the Apostolic See. The chair of St. Peter is still to be seen in 
Rome. 

The Pope is also called from his see the Pope of Kome, and 
the Church under him the Roman Catholic Church. 

Pope Leo XIII. was born at Carpineto, in Italy, on March 2, 1810, 
ordained priest December 31, 1837, Archbishop of Perugia, 1846, and 
Pope February 20, 1878. To his energy we owe the abolition of sla- 
very in Brazil, the campaign against it in Africa by the European 
nations, the repeal of many laws against the Church in Germany, 
the prevention of war between Germany and Spain, the founding of 
over one hundred bi-'shoprics, especially among the heathen, etc. By 
his encyclicals he has denounced the Freemasons, recommended in a 
special manner the Third Order of Stc Francis, and the devotion of 
the Rosary, displayed his zeal for the working classes, and exerted 
himself to produce reunion of the various Christian communities 
with the Catholic Church, etc. He is the two hundred and fifty-ninth 
Pope. 

The Pope has precedence of honor over all other bishops, 
and also of jurisdiction over the whole Church (Vatican Council, 
4, 3). 

" The Pope," says St. Bernard, " is the high priest, the prince 
among bishops." The following are some of his prerogatives : He as- 
sumes a new name on his election, as St. Peter received a new name 
from Our Lord, to signify that he is wholly devoted to his new office. 
From the tenth century onwards it has been the custom to choose the 
name from those of previous Popes, St. Peter's alone being excepted 
out of reverence. He is privileged to wear the tiara, or mitre with 
the triple crown, expressive of the triple office of teacher, priest, and 
pastor; he has also a crosier ending in a cross, and a soutane of white 
silk. His foot is kissed in memory of those words of St. Paul : " How 
beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel of peace, of 
them that bring glad tidings of good things" (Rom. x. 15). He has 
the highest power in the Church as " teacher of all Christians " (Vat- 
ican Council) and " chief -shepherd of the shepherds and their 
flocks." He has the most complete jurisdiction in deciding questions 
of faith and morals, and in arranging the discipline of the universal 
Church. This power extends over every single church, and every 
single bishop and pastor. He may elect and depose bishops, call 
together councils, make and unmake laws, send out missionaries, con- 
fer privileges and dispensations, and reserve sins to his own tribunal. 
For the same reason he may personally teach and guide any of the 
bishops or their flocks. He is the supreme judge of all the faithful; 
to him remains the final appeal. The Pope may choose seventy car- 
dinals to act as his counsellors ; they may have the right of choosing 
a new Pope after the see has been vacant for twelve days. Their 
dress is a scarlet hat and mantle, to remind them of their duty of loy- 
alty to the Pope at the cost even of their blood. They form the 



226 Faith, 

various committees or congregations, e.g., the Congregation of Rites, 
of Indulgences, etc. 

The Pope is quite independent of every temporal sover- 
eignty and of every spiritual power. 

For many years the Popes were temporal sovereigns, and ruled as 
such the States of the Church. The growth of the latter came about 
in the following manner : In the first centuries many estates were be- 
stowed on the Popes as a free gift. From the time of Constantino 
the Great, the emperors lived away from Eome, and thus the Papacy 
began to exercise a certain authority over the city and central Italy. 
In 754 A.D., Pepin, the Prankish king, gave over to the Pope the ter- 
ritory he had won by the sword in the neighborhood of Pome, and 
also some towns on the eastern coast of Italy. This grant was con- 
firmed by Pepin's son, Charlemagne, in 774. The Popes lost and re- 
gained these possessions some seventy-seven times. In 1859 all the 
territory except Pome was torn from the Pope, and in 1870 Pome 
itself, so that now all the Pope possesses is the Vatican. This tem- 
poral sovereignty was of great advantage to the Church; it secured 
the Pope's independence in the exercise of his authority, it gave him 
a status among the powers of the earth, and supplied him with funds 
for carrying on the business connected with the Church, besides in- 
suring liberty in the choice of a Pope. At present he is helped by 
the alms of the faithful, called Peter's pence. Though deprived of 
his possessions the Pope is still recognized as a sovereign, even in 
Italy; and he has acted as arbitrator between nations. Many will 
remember his decision in 1885 in the disputed claims of Spain and 
Germany to the Caroline Islands. He also issues medals, confers 
orders, has the gold and white standard, adopted in allusion to the 
words of St. Peter: "Silver and gold I have none" (Acts iii. 6), 
and has ambassadors (legates and Nuncios) at various courts, etc. 
The Pope is supreme on earth, not being subject even to a general 
council (Eugenius IV., Sept. 4, 1439; Vatican Council, 4, 3). Any 
who appeal from the Pope to a general council are liable to excom- 
munication (Pius IX., October 12, 1869). 

S. BISHOPS, PRIESTS, THE FAITHFUL. 

1. The bishops are the successors of the apostles. 

This is the express teaching of the Vatican Council. The bishops 
differ only from the apostles in having a limited jurisdiction, while 
the mission of the apostles was to the whole world; moreover the 
apostles were personally infallible in their teaching, and having an 
extraordinary mission they had extraordinary gifts, such as infalli- 
bility, the gift of tongues, and miracles. 

The bishops have the following powers: They guide that 
portion of the Church assigned to them by the Pope, and assist 
him in the government of the universal Church. 

From apostolic times bishops were appointed to single sees, e.g., 
Titus to Crete (Tit, i. 5). These divisions of the Church are called 



The Apostles' Creed, 227 

sees or dioceses; some of them are very large. Paris, for example, 
contains more than 3,000,000 souls. The duties of a bishop are to 
educate candidates for the priesthood, to create and confer offices in 
the Church, to give faculties to confessors, to see to the religious edu- 
cation of his flock, to revise books written on religious subjects, to 
settle the days of fasting, etc. In addition he confers the Sacraments 
of Confirmation and Orders, reserves certain sins to his own jurisdic- 
tion, consecrates churches, chalices, the holy oils, etc. Each bishop 
has also the right of voting in general councils. 

The bishops are not merely assistants to the Pope, but they 
are actually guides of the Church. 

They are the shepherds of their respective flocks (Vatican Coun- 
cil, 4, 3) and are appointed by the Holy Ghost to rule the Church of 
God (Acts XX. 28). They are also called "princes of the Church," 
and since they have ordinary or immediate jurisdiction they are often 
called " Ordinaries." They are assisted by a number of canons, who 
make up the body called the chapter; one of these canons becomes 
vicar capitular if the see becomes vacant, and governs the diocese till 
a new bishop be elected. The bishop himself usually appoints the 
chapter, in rare instances the Pope or the archbishop. Many bishops 
have an assistant in the form of a coadjutor-bishop or a vicar-general. 
" The dignity of a bishop," says St. Ambrose, " is higher than that of 
a king." The privileges of the order are as follows: The right to 
wear a mitre, the sign of his leadership, and to carry a crosier, which 
is curved at the end in sign of his limited jurisdiction. He also wears 
a ring, symbolical of his union with the diocese, and a pectoral cross. 
The faithful kiss his hand, and he is addressed by the Pope as 
brother, because as bishop he has the same rank as the Pope. 

The bishops are subject to the Pope and owe him obedience. 

The Pope gives their jurisdiction to the bishops; and no bishop 
may exercise his office before being recognized and confirmed by the 
Pope. He is obliged also to go to Rome {ad limina apostolorum) to 
report on the state of his diocese. An appeal may always be made 
from a bishop to the Pope. Bishops, such as the Greek or Anglican, 
who decline submission to the Pope, are neither members of the 
Church, nor have they jurisdiction, even where they have valid 
orders. 

Archbishops or metropolitans are bishops who have powers 
over other bishops. 

Some have the privilege of wearing the pallium, a white strip of 
wool on the shoulders symbolical of gentleness and humility. The 
Primate is a still higher dignitary, and is the bishop of the whole 
nation. Above him in rank is the Patriarch or Exarch, who in 
former times was set over the metropolitans. The Bishops of An- 
tioch, Alexandria, and Rome were patriarchs, because these sees 
were founded by St. Peter. In our days the titles patriarch and 
Primate signify nothing more than a precedence of dignity; they are 
not of divine institution. There are also others of the clergy who are 
termed prelates; some of them enjoy most or all of the powers of 



228 Faith, 

bishops, and are called vicars apostolic. There are others whose title 
is merely honorary. 

2. The priests are the assistants of the bishops. 

They receive their Orders from the bishop, and so are his spiritual 
sons; and their business is to carry out the commands of the bishop; 
even when called in to assist at councils, they do not vote as judges 
but only as counsellors, nor have they powers to excommunicate. 

The priests have only a portion of the episcopal power, and 
their office may be exercised only with sanction from the bishop. 

This sanction is called the canonical mission (missio canonica). 
The dress of the priest is a soutane, or black garment reaching to the 
feet. 

Parish priests are those to whom the bishop has confided 
permanently the charge of a district. 

The district is called a parish. Dean is the title given to parish 
priests of larger districts. In the assignment of a parish the bishop 
usually shows some consideration for the wishes of the patron or 
patrons, i.e., the person or persons who have been and are con- 
spicuous benefactors in the district. The parish priest is the repre- 
sentative of the bishop, and no one may, without his leave, exercise 
spiritual functions in the parish, such as preaching, baptizing, giv- 
ing extreme unction, marrying, and burying. 

Parish priests who are appointed by the bishop over the 
priests of a large district are called rural deans. 

They make a visitation of the parishes and act as intermediaries 
with the bishop. 

Parish priests of larger districts have assistants, or curates. 

3. A Catholic is one who has been baptized and professes him- 
self to be a member of the Catholic Church. 

The Church is a community into which admittance is gained by 
Baptism. Thus the three thousand baptized on the first Pentecost 
became members of the Church (Acts ii. 41). Moreover a man must 
make external profession of being a member of the Church, so that 
any one who breaks away, for instance, by heresy, no longer belongs 
to the Church in spite of his baptism, though he is not thereby freed 
from his obligations to the Church. Neither heathens, Jews, heretics, 
nor schismatics are members of the Church (Council of Florence), 
though children baptized validly in other communions really belong 
to it. " For," as St. Augustine says, " Baptism is the privilege of the 
true Church, and so the benefits which flow from Baptism are neces- 
sarily fruits which belong only to the true Church. Children baptized 
in other communions cease to be members of the Church only when, 
after reacbing the age of reason, they make formal profession of 
heresy, as, for example, by receiving communion in a non-Catholic 
church." The Christians were at first known by the name of Naza- 
reans, from Nazareth, or Galileans, from Galilee; it was first in 



The Apostles' Creed, 229 

Antioch that the name Christian came to be in use (Acts xi. 26), and 
the name Christians is appropriate. We are followers of Christ, 
willing to be conformed to the image of Christ (Rom. viii. 29). 
" We receive our name," says St. John Chrysostom, " not from an 
earthly ruler, nor from an angel, nor from an archangel, nor from a 
seraphim, but from the King of all the earth." 

A true Catholic is not only one who has been baptized and 
belongs to the Church, but who also makes serious efforts to 
secure his eternal salvation; who believes the teaching of the 
Church, keeps the commandments of God, and of the Church, 
who receives the sacraments, and prays to God in the manner 
prescribed by Christ. 

He is not a true Christian who is ignorant of his faith. Such a 
one might as well call himself a doctor though knowing nothing of 
medicine. " jSTor is he a true Christian," says St. Justin, " who does 
not lire as Christ taught him to live." Our Lord said to the Jews : 
" If you be the children of Abraham do the works of Abraham " 
(John viii. 39), and He might say to the Christians "If you be Chris- 
tians do the works of Christ." " If you want to be a Christian," says 
St. Gregory ISTazianzen, " you must live the life of Christ ;" and St. 
Augustine: "A true Christian is the man who is gentle, good, and 
merciful to all, and shares his bread with the poor." Christ Himself 
said that His disciples should be known by their love one for another 
(John xiii. 35). A Christian who neglects the sacraments is like a sol- 
dier who has no weapons ; what a responsibility he incurs ! Louis of 
Granada says, " A field which is well tended is expected to yield a 
richer harvest; so more good works are expected from a Christian 
than from a heathen, because the Christian has greater graces." 

Every Catholic has rights and duties. He has an especial 
claim to the means of grace supplied by the Church, and he 
is obliged to obey his ecclesiastical superiors in spiritual matters, 
and to make provision for their support as well as for that of 
God's service. 

A good Catholic ought also to hear the word of God, receive the 
necessary sacraments, take part in divine service, and he has a right 
to Christian burial, etc. The Church forces nobody to enter its pale, 
but whoever becomes a member of his own free will, and remains so, 
must be subject to the laws of the Church. Under certain circum- 
stances those who disobey the laws of the Church are excommuni- 
cated or shut out from the Church. They lose their claim to the 
spiritual goods of the Church; they may not join in the divine serv- 
ice, nor receive the sacraments, nor an office in the Church, nor 
Christian burial. Some offences involve excommunication %nso 
facto; for instance, apostasy, duelling, freemasonry (Pius IX., Oc- 
tober 12, 1869). In other cases the excommunication must be formally 
pronounced, and that, too, after warning and trial, as in the case of 
the Old Catholic bishops Reinkens and Dollinger. St. Ambrose for- 
bade the Emperor Theodosius to enter the Church after the latter 
had, by his orders, caused the slaughter of some seven thousand 



230 Faith, 

people in Thessalonica; and it was only after doing severe penance 
that he was admitted. We know, too, that St. Paul cut off from the 
Church a vicious Corinthian (1 Cor. v. 13). The State exercises a 
similar power in banishing criminals. 



Jf. FOUNDATION AND 8PREAD OF TEE CHURCH. 

Christ compared the Church to a grain of mustard-seed, which 
is the smallest of seeds, but grows into a tree in which the birds of 
the air build their nests (Matt. xiii. 31, 32). 

1. Christ laid the foundation of the Church when, in the 
course of His teaching, He gathered a number of disciples, and 
chose twelve of these to preside over the rest and one to be Head 
of all. 

2. The Church first began its life on Pentecost, when some 
three thousand people were baptized. 

Pentecost is the birthday of the Church. After the miracle at 
the gate of the Temple some two thousand more were baptized. 

3. Soon after the descent of the Holy Ghost the apostles began 
to preach the Gospel throughout the world, in accordance with the 
commands of Christ (Mark xvi. 15), and founded Christian com- 
munities in many places. 

St. Paul, after his conversion in 34 A.D., labored more abun- 
dantly than all the apostles (1 Cor. xv. 10) ; he traversed Asia Minor, 
the greater part of Southern Europe, and many islands of the 
Mediterranean. After him St. Peter labored most. After escaping 
by a miracle from his prison in Jerusalem, he founded his see at 
Rome where, in company with St. Paul, he suffered martjrrdom. St. 
John, the beloved disciple, lived at Ephesus with our blessed Lady, 
and governed the Church in Asia Minor. His brother, St. James the 
Greater, travelled as far as Spain, and was beheaded in Jerusalem in 
44 A.D. His body rests at Compostella. St. James the Less governed 
the Church at Jerusalem, and was cast down from a pinnacle of the 
Temple in A.D. 63. St. Andrew preached to the people living along 
the lower Danube, and died on a cross in Achaia. St. Thomas and 
St. Bartholomew made their way to the Euphrates and Tigris, and 
as far as Lidia. St. Simon evangelized Egypt and IN'orth Africa. 

The apostles established their communities after the folloAv- 
ing plan: having converted and baptized a number of men in 
a place, they chose assistants, to whom they imparted a greater 
or less portion of their own powers; and before leaving the 
place they made choice of a successor, and gave him full power's 
(Acts xiv. 22). 

Those who received only a small portion of the apostolic power 
were called deacons, and priests those who had ampler faculties. 
The representatives of the apostles were called bishops. Christ gave 
the apostles power to choose successors when He gave to them the 



The A2)0stles' Creed, 231 

self-same power which He had received from the Father (John xx. 
21) ; and it was His wish that they should choose successors, for 
He told the apostles that their mission should continue to the end of 
the world (Matt, xxviii. 20). 

Among all the Christian communities that of Kome took the 
highest rank, because it was presided over by St. Peter, the chief 
of the apostles, and because to the Head of that community 
as successor of St. Peter the primacy of St. Peter was trans- 
ferred. 

St. Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch (107 a.d.) in a letter to the 
Christians of Rome, begs them not to set him free and calls the 
Roman community the " chief community of the holy band of the 
faithful;" and St. Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyons (202 a.d.), says "AIL 
the faithful over the whole world must conform to the Roman Church 
on account of its principality." 

All Christian communities which have been formed in the 
course of time professed the same faith, and acknowledged the 
same means of grace and the same Head. Hence they formed 
one large community — the Catholic Church. 

4. When the great persecutions broke out, the Church spread 
more rapidly over the earth. 

During the first three centuries there were ten persecutions, the 
severest being under iN'ero and Diocletian (284-385 a.d.), the latter 
monster condemning some 2,000,000 Christians. They were mar- 
tyred in various ways; they were beheaded like St. Paul, crucified 
like St. Peter, stoned like St. Stephen, thrown to the lions like St. 
Ignatius of Antioch, roasted on gridirons like St. Lawrence, drowned 
like St. Florian, flayed like St. Bartholomew, cast over clifTs or from 
high places like St. James, burned at the scaffold like St. Polycarp, 
buried alive like St. Chrysanthus, etc. The very means adopted to 
exterminate the Christian religion helped to propagate it. The 
speeches of the Christians before their judges often converted the 
hearers. The joy with which they faced death, their superhuman 
patience, and their love of their enemies, were powerful influences 
on the heathen. Added to this M^ere the miracles which often hap- 
pened during the martyi-doms, as for instance in the case of St. Poly- 
carp and St. John at the Lateran Gate. In the words of St. 
Rupert, the martyrs are like the seed which is buried in the earth, 
and sprouts and brings forth much fruit ; or of St. Leo the Great, if 
the storm scatters the seed this benefit results that instead of one, 
some fifty other trees grow up. " The blood of the martyrs," says 
Tertullian, "is the seed of Christians." The life of the Christians 
was then a model, and they abounded in saints. At the risk of their 
life they prayed to God in the catacombs. Two years of probation 
were demanded of the catechumens before reception. 

When the Roman emperor, Constantine the Great, had per- 
mitted his subjects to become Christians and later made the 



232 Faith. 

Christian religion the State religion (324 a.d.), the Church 
indeed flourished externally, but fervor and religious discipline 
soon began to suffer. 

Constantine was led to this step by the appearance of the 
luminous cross in the heavens (312 a.d.), and still more by his holy 
mother St. Helena. The following were some of his ordinances: 
Sundays and feast days were to be observed with solemnity; the 
temples of the heathen were to be handed over to the bishops; the 
gladiatorial combats and the crucifixion of criminals were forbidden, 
and many churches were built. By the miraculous draught of fishes 
related in the fifth chapter of St. Luke and the two boats almost 
sunk with the weight of fish, was prefigured the future of the Church, 
which should suffer schism with the increase of its members, while 
Christians should sink down to earthly things. The heresy of Arius 
(318 A.D.) began its deadly work in the time of Constantine, and 
had a great following. At this time also ceased the test of the cate- 
chumens, so that it was easier to become a member of the Church. 
St. Augustine had reason to say: "If the Church is harassed by 
external foes, there are many in her bosom who by their unruly life 
make sad the hearts of the faithful." 

5. In the Middle Ages nearly all the heathen nations began 
to enter the Church. 

In Austria about 450 a.d., the monk Severinus preached the 
Gospel for thirty years along the banks of the Danube. St. Gregory 
the Great, in 600 a.d., sent St. Augustine at the head of a number 
of missioners to convert England; eighty years later the country was 
Christian and had twenty-six sees. Germany owes most to St. 
Eoniface, who preached the Gospel there for about forty years (755 
A.D.). The Greek monks Saints Cyril and Methodius worked among 
the Slavs, mainly of Bohemia and Moravia, with great success. The 
Hungarians were converted by their holy king Stephen (1038 a.d.) 
" the apostolic king." Christianity was gradually introduced into 
Iceland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Eussia and Poland after 1000 

A.D. 

The Church was hard pressed by Islam during the Middle 
Ages. 

Islamism or Mohammedanism was founded by Mohammed, a 
native of Mecca, who gave himself out to be a prophet of the one 
true God, promised sensual joy after death, allowed plurality of 
wives, imposed a pilgrimage to Mecca, taught fatalism, and after 
propagating his doctrines by fire and sword, was poisoned in 632 
A.D., by a Jewess. The Koran is the sacred book of the Moham- 
medans. They keep the Friday with great solemnity, and pray five 
times a day turned towards Mecca. Mohammed's successors were the 
caliphs, who undertook wars of conquest on a large scale, every- 
where rooting out the Christian religion. They overran a great 
part of Asia, North Africa, Spain and the islands of the Mediterra- 
nean. Charles Martel, in a series of victories (732-738 a.d.), ar- 
rested their advance into France, and ever since their failure in 1638 
before Vienna, their progress in the West was arrested. 



llie Apostles' Creed. 233 

In addition the Church lost many adherents in the Middle 
Ages by the Greek schism. 

The causes of the schism were as follows: The emperors of the 
East kept trying to make the patriarchs of Constantinople independent 
of Rome, while these were often for their heresies put under ban by 
the councils. In time it came about that the ambitious Photius, 
backed up by the emperor, held a council of the Eastern bishops, and 
broke away from Rome (867 a.d.). The succeeding emperor re-estab- 
lished the old relations with Rome. Two hundred years later, how- 
ever, the patriarch Michael Cerularius renewed the contest (1054 
A.D.), and the schism effected by him lasts till the present day. They 
call themselves the Orthodox Greeks, while we call them the Schis- 
matic Greeks, in opposition to the United Greeks or Uniates, who 
preserved their allegiance to Rome. 

6. In later times many nations of the newly discovered coun- 
tries were converted. 

The Spaniards and Portuguese led the van of missionary enter- 
prise. One of the most famous of these missionaries is St. Francis 
Xavier, the apostle of the Indies, who used to call the little children 
together with a bell, as he made his way through the cities of India, 
the islands of Molucca, and Japan, to teach them the truths of re- 
ligion (1552 A.D.) ; he had the gift of tongues, and baptized some two 
million heathens. After his death great work was done in China 
by the Jesuits, especially Ricci and Schall. Another great mission- 
ary is St. Peter Claver (1654 a.d.) whose work was mostly among 
the negroes in South America. Cardinal Lavigerie in our own time 
has done much in Africa, especially in resisting the slave trade, and 
founding a congregation for the conversion of the natives. The 
College of Propaganda was founded at Rome in 1662 for the train- 
ing of young men from all nations for a missionary career. At pres- 
ent some 15,000 priests, 5,000 lay brothers and 50,000 nuns are at 
work in the foreign missions; the missionaries belong for the most 
part to the Orders of Jesuits, Franciscans, Capuchins, Benedictines, 
and Lazarists. The organizations for the support of the missions are 
the Propagation of the Faith and the Holy Childhood. It is a sacred 
obligation to help in such work, and the efforts of non-Catholics 
in this direction may well put us to shame. 

In later times the Church has lost many members by the 
Lutheran and Anglican heresies. 

Martin Luther, an Augustinian monk of Erfurt, and later 
teacher in the high school at Wittenburg, took offence because he 
thought that he was not sufficiently held in esteem at Rome. When 
Pope Leo X., anxious to complete the building of St. Peter's, gave 
indulgences to those who should subscribe to the work, and sent out 
preachers to promulgate these indulgences, Luther came forward with 
his ninety-five propositions on indulgences, and nailed them to the 
door of the church at Wittenberg. These propositions at first con- 
demned only the abuses of indulgences in the Church, but later 
went on to combat the teaching of the Church on the subject (1517). 



234 Faith, 

Eefusing to withdraw them at the command of the Pope he wa^ 
excommunicated (1520), and also outlawed by the emperor for nol 
answering the summons requiring him to appear before the council 
at Worms. He sought protection from the Elector of Saxony. His 
heresy soon spread over Germany and led to many religious wars. 
The name Protestant was assumed by the Lutherans at Spires iii 
1529, on account of their protest against Catholic doctrine. The 
Peace of Augsburg secured to the Protestants the same rights as 
Catholics (1555). The Council of Trent set forth the points in dis- 
pute between Catholics and Protestants (1545-1563). Luther died in 
1546. His chief errors are contained in the following propositions: 
(1). There is no supreme teaching power in the Church. (2). The 
temporal sovereign has supreme power in matters ecclesiastical. (3). 
There are no priests. (4). All that is to be believed is in the Scrip- 
ture. (5). Each one may interpret the Holy Scriptures as he likes. 
(6). Faith alone saves, good works are superfluous. (7). This last 
follows from the fact that man lost his free will by original sin. (8). 
There are no saints, no Christian sacrifice, no sacrament of confes- 
sion, no purgatory. The Jesuits, founded by St. Ignatius of Loyola 
(1540), won many back again to the fold of the Church. Zwingli and 
Calvin in Switzerland, and Henry VIII. in England, about the same 
time helped in Luther's deadly work. The errors of the Anglican 
Church were drawn up later in the form of Thirty-nine Articles, 
which are quite Lutheran in tone. 

7. At present the Catholic Church numbers about 288,000,000 
members. 

These are under the direction of about 1,478 bishops, counting 
about 15 patriarchs, 314 archbishops and 20 prelates with dioceses. 
There are some 375,000 Catholic priests in the whole world. The in- 
habitants of Italy, Spain, France, Austria, Belgium, and Ireland are 
nearly 'all Catholics. In Switzerland about half are Catholics; in 
Germany over a third of the population, and in Russia 11,000,000. 
In Europe about three-quarters of the entire population are Catholic. 
In America there are 80,000,000 Catholics, of whom there are 18,000- 
000 in the United States, forming one-fifth of the entire popula- 
tion, while Mexico, south and central America, with the exception of 
Brazil, are almost entirely Catholic. The adjacent islands are mainly 
Catholic. In Asia there are only 10,000,000 Catholics, in Africa 
3,000,000, in Australia 1,000,000. The Protestants, comprising the 
various sects of Lutherans, Calvinists, Anglicans, etc., number 167,- 
000,000; they inhabit England, North and Central Germany, the 
Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, parts of Switzerland and 
Hungary, and the United States of America. The Oriental Greeks 
or Schismatic Greeks number about 121,000,000. They occupy for 
the most part the Balkan peninsula and Russia. Besides these there 
are some 10,000,000 of various other Christian sects, hence a total of 
576,000,000 Christians. Since the inhabitants of the earth amount to 
about 1,700,000,000 only a little over one-third of the human race is 
Christian. The Mohammedans number 227,000,000; they inhabit 
Arabia, Western Asia, the northern half of Africa, and part of Tur- 
key. In addition there are 15,000,000 Jews; they are for the greater 
part in Russia and Austria. Finally there are still 1,116,000,000 



The Apostles' Creed. 235 

heathens, dwelling for the most part in Southern Africa, India, 
China and Japan. 

6. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH IS INDESTRUCTIBLE 
AND INFALLIBLE. 

Indestructibility of the Church, 

The Catholic Church is indestrnctible ; i.e., it will remain till 
the end of the world, for Christ said : " The gates of hell shall not 
prevail against it " (Matt. xvi. 18). 

Hence there will always be Popes, bishops, and faithful, and God's 
revealed truths will ever be found in the Catholic Church. The 
archangel Gabriel had announced to Mary: "Of His kingdom there 
shall be no end" (Luke i. 33). "The Church," says St. Ambrose, 
" is like the moon ; it may wane, but never be destroyed ; it may be 
darkened, but it can never disappear." " The bark of the Church," 
says St. Ansel m, " may be swept by the waves, but it can never sink 
because Christ is there." 

1. Of all the persecutors of the Church none have succeeded 
against it, and some have come to a fearful end. 

Judas' end is the type of those of his imitators. Herod, the mur- 
derer of the infants of Bethlehem, died in unspeakable tortures; 
so, too, Herod the murderer of St. James was devoured by worms. 
Pilate was banished by the emperor to Yienne, in France, and there 
he took his own life. During the siege of Jerusalem 1,000,000 Jews 
died of hunger or sickness, or in battle, the city itself was reduced to 
ashes and some hundred thousand Jews carried off into captivity. 
The tjTant N^ero was deposed, and in his flight from Rome was 
stabbed by a slave. Diocletian came to a shameful end. Before his 
death his family were sent into exile, his statues were destroyed, 
and his body attacked with a loathsome disease. Julian the Apostate 
was struck down on the field of battle by a lance; his last words 
were : " Galilean, Thou hast conquered." The case of INTapoleon is 
instructive. He kept Pius VII. a prisoner for five years, he himself 
was a prisoner for seven years; in the castle at Fontainebleau he 
forced the Pope to give up the States of the Church, promising a 
yearly income of 2,000,000 francs; in the same place he was himself 
forced to sign his abdication, and received a promise of a yearly 
income of the same amount. Four days after giving the order to 
unite the States of the Church with France he lost the battles of 
Aspern and Erlingen. He answered the excommunication launched 
against him, saying that the words of an old man would not make the 
arms drop from the hands of his soldiers. This actually happened 
in his Russian campaign from the intense cold ; and on the same day 
on which !N"apoleon died at St. Helena, Pius VTI. was celebrating his 
own feast day at Rome. "No wonder the French have a saying: 
"Whoever eats of the Pope dies." The same fate is shared by the 
founders of heresies, and the enemies of religion. Arius burst asun- 
der during a triumphal procession; Voltaire died in despair. These 



236 Faith. 

facts and many more of the same kind illustrate the words of Holy 
Writ : " It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living 
God" (Heb. X. 31). 

2. When the Church is in the greatest need, Christ ever 
comes to its help, either by miracles or by raising up saintly men. 

The appearance of the cross in the heavens, for instance, seen by 
Constantino and his army, brought the Christian persecution to an 
«n(l. " The Church," says St. Jerome, " is like Peter's bark. When 
the storm is at its height the Lord wakes from His sleep and com- 
mands peace." 

3. " It is peculiar to the Church,'' says St. Hilary, " xo 
flourish most when persecuted." 

" Persecutions," says St. Augustine, " serve to bring forth saints." 
To the Church as well as to Eve were the words spoken : " In sorrow 
shalt thou bring forth children" (Gen. iii. 16). The members of 
the Church increase under persecution. The Church is a field, fruit- 
ful only when torn up by the plough, or it is a vine, stronger and 
richer for being pruned. "As fire is spread by the wind, so is the 
Church increased by persecution," says St. Rupert. Persecution 
purifies the Church; even if millions fall away, it is not a loss but 
a cleansing. The time of persecution is usually a period of miracles, 
attesting the divine origin of the Church, as in the Babylonish cap- 
tivity they attested the truth of the religion of the Jews. How 
often have Christians come unhurt out of boiling liquid, like St. 
Cecilia, or remained unharmed in the midst of the flames, like St. 
Polycarp, or been thrown to the beasts and received their homage like 
St. Venantius ? Facts like these force the enemies of the Church to 
exclaim : " Mighty indeed is the God of the Christians." The Church 
comes triumphant out of every persecution. Easter always follows 
Good Friday. But a few years ago the bishops in Germany were 
cast into prison, the religious Orders driven out, the administration 
of the sacraments in part forbidden; at the present day the number 
of Catholic members in the Reichstag is over a hundred, the Catho- 
lic journals have increased to four or five hundred, yearly con- 
gresses take place, and all kinds of unions for Catholic objects are 
formed, while the Catholics themselves are stauncher and more self- 
sacrificing. " The more battles the Church has to fight, the more her 
powers are developed; and the more she is oppressed the higher she 
rises," are the words of Pius VII. Such a privilege belongs to no in- 
stitution save the Church, and by that she may be recognized as the 
offspring of God, the Bride of Christ. 

The Infallibility of the Church. 

God has planted in our hearts a longing for truth which must 
be satisfied. Our first parents had no difliculties to face in the search 
for truth. " In the state of innocence," says St. Thomas, " it was im- 
possible for man to mistake false for true." Ever since the Fall, to 
err is human. God, however, sent an infallible Teacher, His only- 



The Apostles' Creed, 237 

begotten Son, that man might again find the truth ; hence the words 
of Christ to Pilate : " For this came I into the world that I should 
give testimony of the truth" (John xviii. 37). Christ was to be a 
light to our understandings, darkened as they were by sin (John iii. 
19). As Christ was not to remain always on earth, He appointed 
another infallible teacher. His Church, and provided it with the 
necessary gifts, especially with the assistance of the Holy Spirit. 

Christ conferred on His apostles and their successors the 
teaching office, and promised them His divine assistance. 

Thus He said at His ascension into heaven : " Going, teach ye all 
nations . . . and behold I am with you all days, even to the con- 
summation of the world " (Matt, xxviii. 19, 20) ; and at the Last Sup- 
per : " I will ask the Father and He shall give you another Paraclete 
that He may abide with you forever, the Spirit of truth" (John 
xiv. 16, 17). To St. Peter He said: "The gates of hell shall not 
prevail against the Church " (Matt. xvi. 18). Since Christ is the Son 
of God, His words must be true. If the Church, in the carrying out of 
her teaching ofiice, could lead man into error, Christ would not have 
kept His word. Hence St. Paul calls the Church " the pillar and 
ground of the truth " (1 Tim. iii. 15), and the measures decided upon 
by the apostles in the Council of Jerusalem were introduced with the 
words : " For it hath seemed good to the Holy Ghost and to us " 
(Acts XV. 28). It is no recent belief that the Church is infallible. Long 
ago Origen writes, " As in the heavens there are two great sources 
of light, the sun, and the moon which borrows its light from the 
sun, so there are two sources of our interior light — Christ and the 
Church. Christ, the Light of the world, shares His light with the 
Church, and she enlightens all the earth." In the words of St. 
Irenseus : " Where the Church is, there is also the Spirit of God." 

1. The Catholic Church is infallible in her teaching; i.e., the 
Holy Spirit assists the Church in such a manner that she cannot 
err in the preserving and announcing of revealed doctrine. 

Just as our reason prevents us from making statements which 
are contrary to certain fundamental truths, so the Holy Ghost exerts 
His influence to prevent the Church giving any decision con- 
trary to the truths taught by Christ. The infallibility of the Church 
is not in any way like that of God with God, for she attributes it not 
to herself but to God's special providence over her. 

2. The Church delivers her infallible decisions through general 
councils and through the Pope. 

In every kingdom some court is established for the settlement 
of doubtful cases; it is evident that the all-wise God must have in- 
stituted some such tribunal in His kingdom; and this tribunal is 
the general assembly of the bishops, for at His ascent into heaven He 
gave them the power to teach, and promised them immunity from 
error (Matt, xxviii. 18-20). Hence the expression of St. Cyprian: 
" The Church is in the bishops." Now since the bishops cannot 
always assemble together on account of their duties towards their 
particular dioceses, some other tribunal must exist with power to 



238 Faith, 

give infallible decisions. This tribunal is the Pope speaking 
ex cathedra. The priests have not this infallibility secured to them, 
though their services are indispensable to the bishops in the carrying 
out of the teaching offica Priests when present in the assemblies 
of bishops are so as counsellors, but without any deciding vote in 
the questions under consideration. So soon as the Church defines a 
question of doctrine, every one is bound before God to submit under 
pain of excommunication. 

A general council is the assembly of the bishops of the world 
presided over by the Pope. 

The apostles in the year 51 held the first Council of Jerusalem, 
and announced their decisions as coming from God. Of the first four 
general councils St. Gregory the Great asserted that he held them in 
equal honor with the four gospels. Since the Council at Jerusalem 
there have been twenty general councils assembled. The first of 
these was held at Mcsea, in the year 325, to repel the Arian heresy. 
The following are specially worthy of note: the Third Council at 
Ephesus in 425, where Mary was declared to be the Mother of God; 
the Seventh General Council, or Second of ISTicsea in 787, where the 
veneration of images was declared lawful; the Twelfth General 
Council or Fourth Lateran in 1215, which imposed the obligation of 
the Easter communion; the !N'ineteenth General Council at Trent 
(1545-1563), occasioned by Luther's heresies; the Twentieth General 
Council in the Vatican (1870), where the infallibility of the Pope 
was defined as an article of faith. The presence of all the bishops 
is not required for a general council, but the greater number of them 
must be there; nor is a unanimous vote in any way necessary to 
secure a definition; a majority of votes approaching more or less to 
unanimity is quite sufiicient. Thus in the Vatican Council five hun- 
dred and thirty-three bishops voted for the definition of Papal in- 
fallibility; two voted against, and fifty-two were absent from the 
meeting. ISTor is it necessary that the Pope should preside in person ; 
he may act through his legates as in the first, third, and fourth gen- 
eral councils. All that is necessary is that the Pope should approve 
of the decrees of the council. Others besides bishops have a vote, 
such as the cardinals, generals of religious Orders, and all who have 
episcopal authority, as in the case of many prelates and abbots; 
suffragans have also a vote when they are summoned, as happened in 
1870. The general council only settles questions after mature con- 
sideration, relying generally on the teaching of the Catholic Church 
in the early ages. Besides general councils there are national coun- 
cils, or assemblies of the bishops of a nation or kingdom under their 
primate, and also provincial councils or meetings of the bishops and 
dignitaries of a district under the archbishop; and finally diocesan 
synods, or assemblies of the clergy under their bishop. Such assem- 
blies have no claim to infallibility. 

The general consent of the bishops all over the world con- 
firmed by the Pope is also infallible; this may happen when the 
Pope asks their opinion on a question of doctrine or morals. 

A case of the kind happened in 1854. The Pope sent round to 



The Apostles' Creed, 239 

the various bishops of the world to ascertain the feeling of Chris- 
tians at large as regarded the Immaculate Conception of Our Lady. 
As nearly all tlie replies approved of the doctrine, it was solemnly 
defined as of faith. This consensus of the bishops, though living 
apart at the time, was infallible, because the Holy Spirit is not con- 
fined by limitations of place. ISTor was this solemn declaration neces- 
sary; it was quite sufficient that all the bishops should teach in the 
same sense in regard of any given subject to make that teaching 
infallible ; were it otherwise the Church would be capable of teaching 
heresy, or of falling away from the truth. Hence the Vatican Council 
declared that not only must that be accepted which has been solemnly 
defined by the Church, but also whatever is proposed by the lawful 
and general teaching authority (Vatican Council, 3, 3). 

The Pope makes an infallible definition when, as teacher and 
guide of the Church, he proposes to the universal Church a doc- 
trine of faith or morals. These decrees are called doctrinal. 

The Vatican Council in 1870 decreed that all doctrinal decisions 
of the Pope were infallible. This is the logical consequence of the 
words of Christ to St. Peter : " Thou art Peter, and upon this rock 
I mil build My Church" (Matt. xvi. 18). If the foundation of the 
Church were to fail, it would not be a rock but a quicksand. More- 
over St. Peter was appointed shepherd of the apostles and the faith- 
ful in these words of Our Lord : " Feed My lambs, feed My sheep " 
(John xxi. 15, 17), and he received power to confirm his brethren in 
the faith (Luke xxii. 32). If then the Pope were to teach error, 
Our Lord's promise would have come to naught. Decisions in matters 
of doctrine were held in the greatest reverence from the earliest 
times. When the Roman See condemned in 417 the errors of Pelagius 
St. Augustine cried out : " Rome has spoken ; the cause is at an end." 
And St. Cyprian says : " No heretics can gain admittance to the 
Church." Even general councils call the Bishop of Rome "the 
father and teacher of all Christians" (Council of Florence, 1439), 
and the Roman Church " the Mother and Teacher of the faithful " 
(Council of Lateran, iv., 1215) ; of course the Church understood 
here is the teaching, the " hearing " Church having no claim to teach. 
The Pope must be infallible for this reason, too, that " he has full 
power to govern the whole Church " (Council of Florence) ; for with 
this power is necessarily linked authority to teach. The supreme 
teaching office of the Church involves infallibility in accordance 
with the divine promise of the assistance of the Holy Ghost. In 
consequence of this the decisions of the Pope are infallible of them- 
selves, quite independently of the consent of the bishops (Council of 
Vatican, iv. 4). "Were it otherwise the rock (or successor of 
St. Peter) would derive its strength and solidity from the building 
raised upon it (the Church). It would, however, be quite wrong to 
assert that the Pope is infallible in all things; for he is a man and 
can make mistakes as other men in writing, speaking, etc. He can 
also commit sin as other men, and unhappily some of the Popes led 
very scandalous lives. When the Pope gives a decision on a doctrinal 
matter, it is Christ Who keeps him from error by the agency of the 
Holy Ghost; moreover the bishops are always consulted before any 
such decision is given. Addresses to pilgrims, letters to kings and 



240 Faith, 

princes, the brief of suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773, are 
not infallible pronouncements. Doctrinal decisions are usually ac- 
companied by sentence of excommunication against those who refuse 
to submit to them; hence such decisions are binding for all Catholics. 
Although the Pope is infallible in his solemn decisions, general coun- 
cils are not for that reason superfluous; for they confer a greater 
external solemnity on the Pope's decrees, and the teaching of the 
Church can be more thoroughly examined in these assemblies. 
Hence these general councils may, under certain circumstances, be 
necessary as well as useful. Even the apostles held a general council 
at Jerusalem, though each single apostle was infallible in his office 
as teacher. 

3. The Church pronounces infallible judgments in the follow- 
ing cases: On doctrines of faith and morals and their meaning 
and interpretation, on the Holy Scripture and Tradition and their 
interpretation. 

If, for instance, the Church declares that the punishments of 
hell are eternal, the declaration is infallible, for it is made on a 
doctrine of faith; or again if it declare that the observation of Sun- 
day is a command of God, the declaration turns on teaching with 
regard to morals and is therefore infallible. Christ made a special 
promise to His apostles that the Holy Ghost should teach them all 
truth (John xvi. 13) ; in other words that the Holy Ghost would teach 
them all truth bearing on religion ; and that religion included moral- 
ity as well as belief may be gathered from the words of Christ just be- 
fore His ascent into heaven : " Going therefore teach ye all nations 
. . . teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have com- 
manded you" (Matt, xxviii. 19, 20), and with regard to this last 
order He promised them the assistance of the Holy Ghost, and con- 
sequently, infallibility. Since the Church derives her doctrine from 
two sources. Holy Scripture and Tradition, it must be infallible in its 
interpretation of both. 

Moreover, it is certain that the Church is infallible when 
it declares that any given opinion on faith or morals is contrary 
to revealed teaching, as also in the canonization of saints. 

It is the common opinion of theologians that the Church is infal- 
lible in judging whether a proposition is opposed to revealed teach- 
ing. If, for example, the Church were to condemn the assertion that 
man is the offspring of a pair of apes as contrary to revelation, it 
would be acting quite within the limits of its infallibility, and on a 
subject most intimately connected with revealed doctrine. If the 
Church can see truth it must also be able to recognize error. From 
the earliest times the Church has condemned error, whether taught by 
writing or by word of mouth. At the Council of Mcsea (325), the 
errors of Arius were condemned by the bishops. Fp to the present 
day the Pope has continually condemned books which have attacked 
faith or morals ; and this could not have been unless God had conferred 
such powers. Any mistake in either beatifying or canonizing seems 
well-nigh impossible even on natural grounds, on account of the strict 
examination insisted on. By the act of canonization, the veneration 



The Apostles' Creed. 241 

of a saint, and so to a certain extent the acknowledgment of the 
Church's belief in him, is imposed on the faithful, and he is then 
officially recognized in the Church's offices, as in the Mass and 
Breviary; hence if any one not a saint were declared holy, the whole 
Church would approve an error. Such a supposition is impossible. 
Pope Benedict XIV. declares his own experience in these cases of the 
assistance of the Holy Spirit in removing insuperable difficulties 
which beset a process, or, on the other hand, in breaking it off en- 
tirely. Finally the Church in its decisions whether of beatification 
or canonization is dealing with things which have the closest con- 
nection with doctrine of faith or morals. 



6. THE HIERARCHY OF THE CHURCH. 

1. The ministers of the Church fall into three classes of dis- 
tinct dignity and power: bishops, priests, and deacons (Council 
of Trent, 23 c. 4. Can. 6). 

These were foreshadowed in the high priest, the priests, and the 
Levites of the Temple, as well as in Our Lord^ the apostles, and dis- 
ciples. To the apostles Our Lord said : " As the Father hath sent 
Me, so I send you " (John xx, 21) ; to the disciples merely : " Go, 
behold I send you" (Luke x. 3). The apostles were sent to all the 
nations of the earth (Matt, xxviii. 20) ; the disciples only to those 
places where the Lord was Himself to go (Luke x. 1). The bishops 
are now the successors of the apostles (Council of Trent, xxiii. 4) ; 
hence the bishops are of higher rank than priests because they belong 
to a higher order of the clergy and have higher orders ; besides that 
they have greater powers, being the only real pastors of the flock, 
and in virtue of their jurisdiction deciding how far any one else 
may share in their government of those committed to their charge. 
" The bishop alone can give orders," says St. Jerome, and according 
to St. CjTprian he is the only ordinary minister of Confirmation. 
The Council of Trent assigned to bishops many other privileges 
beyond those enjoyed by the other ministers of the Church. In 
addition they have a judicial vote in councils. Priests rank higher 
than deacons, having higher orders and greater powers ; they can offer 
the holy sacrifice, and forgive sins, while deacons can only baptize, 
preach, and give communion. 

2. This hierarchy was in force in the time of the apostles. 

We see in the Scriptures Timothy appointed with powers to 
judge priests (1 Tim. v. 19), to ordain them (1 Tim. v. 22), and to 
appoint them to various cities (Tit. i. 5). St. Ignatius of Antioch 
(107 A.D.) names the three orders: "Let all obey the bishops as Jesus 
obeyed the Father; lot them obey the priests as the apostles, and 
honor the deacons as being the messengers of God." Similar expres- 
sions occur in Clement of Rome (100 A.D.), and Clement of Alex- 
andria (217 A.D.). There was, however, a certain vagueness in the 
use of terms in the time of the apostles; priests were called " elders " 
or " overseers." The former title owed its origin to tbe Jewish con- 
verts, the latter to the heathen. In every community there were sev- 



242 . Faith. 

eral priests (1 Tim. iv. 14), of whom one was the superior or " high 
priest," known in later times as the bishop. He was often called 
priest merely because he was in reality a priest; even the apostles 
Peter and John called themselves priests (1 Pet. v. 1; 2 John i. 1). 

3. The episcopal and priestly office was instituted by Christ 
Himself; the diaconate by the apostles. 

The deacons were appointed by the apostles to distribute alms, 
and were consecrated to this duty by the laying on of hands, accom- 
panied with prayer (Acts vi. 6) ; they also had spiritual functions 
as preaching (as in the case of St. Stephen) and baptizing (as in the 
case of St. Philip). In the early ages there were also deaconesses — 
widows who tended the sick and taught young girls. They were no 
part of the hierarchy, since it was a fixed principle in the Church 
that no woman should preach (1 Cor. xiv. 34), because she is subject 
to man and was first led astray in paradise (1 Tim. ii. 12, etc.). 

4. Besides these three classes there are other degrees varying 
in their powers : for example, Pope, cardinals, archbishops. 

The distribution of authority is the basis of this classification: 
all, without exception, owe obedience to the Pope; the bishop rules all 
the clergy of his diocese; the clergy are in authority over those com- 
mitted to their charge (1 Pet. v. 5; Heb. xiii. 17). The Church has 
its differences of rank like an army (Council of Trent, xxiii. 24) ; 
without these grades it would be a society without organization. 

7. NOTES OF THE TRUE CHURCH. 

"When," says St. Cyprian, "the devil saw that the worship of 
idols was abolished, and the heathen temples emptied, he bethought 
him of a new poison, and led men into error under cover of the Chris- 
tian religion, the poison of false doctrine and pride, through which 
more than two hundred churches have started up in opposition to the 
true Church founded by Christ." ISTow God has ordained that men 
should come to knowledge of the truth; i.e., of the true Church as 
distinguished from all others by certain marks. 

1. The true Church is that one which is most persecuted by 
the world, and which has received God's seal in the form of 
miracles. 

Christ often spoke to His disciples of these persecutions : " The 
servant is not greater than his Master. If they have persecuted Me 
they will also persecute you" (John xv. 20).^ " They will deliver you 
up in councils, and they will scourge you in their synagogues . . . 
you shall be hated by all men for My name's sake" (Matt. x. 17-22). 
"Yea, the hour cometh that whosoever killeth you, will think that 
he doth a service to God" (John xvi. 2). "Because you are not of 
the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the 
world hateth you" (John xv. 19). ITever in the history of the 
Catholic Church has it been free from persecution. Whatever be 
the differences between the Fects they unite against the Church. The 
apostles, especially St. Paul, were objects of hate to the Jews (Acts 



The Apostles' Creed, 243 

xiii. 50; xvii. 8), and St. John (166 a.d.) testifies that their hatred of 
the Christians had not died out in his day. The present day is not 
wanting in examples in the sufferings inflicted on religious com- 
munities, in the interference of the secular governments in things 
spiritual, in the opposition made to processions and meetings and 
other devout practices. Can any Church be the true Church which 
does not oppose the spirit of the world ? Then too it is only in the 
Catholic Church that we have miracles: those, for instance, of the 
apostles, all the saints worked both in their lifetime and after death, 
either at their graves or by the application of their relics. We know 
that God would work miracles only in confirmation of the truth. 

2. The true Church is that one in which the successor of St. 
Peter is to be found. 

The Church rests on a rock and that rock is Peter : " Thou art 
Peter and upon this rock I will build My Church " (Matt, xxviii. 20). 
" Where Peter is, there is the Church," says St. Ambrose. 

3. The true Church is known by the following four marks: 
she is One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic. 

The Catholic Church alone has these marks: 

1. The true Church is One. She has at all times and in 
all places the same doctrine, the same means of grace, and only 
one Head. 

Truth can only be one; hence the teaching of the Church cannot 
change. Christ wished His Church to be one; for that He prayed 
at the Last Supper (John xvii. 20) ; " There shall be one fold and one 
shepherd " (John x. 16) ; He appointed one Head for the whole 
Church (John xxi. 17). The Catholic Church is One: her Cate- 
chisms the world over teach precisely the same doctrine. Every- 
where the holy sacrifice is offered, and the sacraments given in the 
same way; the same ceremonies and feasts are observed all over the 
world. All Catholics acknowledge the Pope as Head of the Chiu'ch. 
If there were antipopes it is none the less true that some one was the 
true Pope ; the existence of many pretenders to a throne does not ex- 
clude the claim of the true king. Nor can heresy destroy this unity, 
for the heretic who refuses to submit is no longer a member of the 
Church. None need accuse the Church of want of progress because 
it holds fast by its old established doctrines; there is no true prog- 
ress in giving up the truth and adopting error. The truth cannot 
change; hence Bossuet might well say: "Protestantism, thou art 
changeable, therefore thou canst not be the truth ! " 

2. The true Church is Holy, i.e., it has the means and the 
endeavor to lead all men to holiness. 

Christ founded the Church for the very purpose of making men 
holy. The Catholic Church is holy. All its teaching is lofty and 
pure; the great principle underlying its commands are self-denial 
and the love of one's neighbor ; all its sacraments, and especially pen- 
ance and the Holy Eucharist are great aids to the sanctification of 
mankind, and the complete following out of the evangelical counsels 



244 Faith, 

can lead a man to the highest point of perfection; moreover the 

Cathoiic Church has a host of saints, whose holiness is attested by 
miracles. The misdeeds of some members, or abuses occurring 
within the Church are due not to the Church, but to the perversity of 
men. Even among the apostles there was a traitor, and Christ com- 
pared some members of the Church to weeds and worthless fish. Can 
any Church be holy which adopts Luther's teaching that faith alone 
is sufficient for salvation, and good works unnecessary ? or Calvin's 
doctrine that some men are predestined by God to hell fire ? or any 
Church which, on its own confession, owns that none of its members 
have been saints and their sanctity confirmed by miracle ? 

3. The true Church is universal or Catholic, i.e., she is em- 
powered to receive men into her bosom in all places and all 
times. 

Christ died for all men, and on ascending into heaven gave His 
apostles the mission to teach all the nations of the earth till the end 
of time (Matt, xxviii. 20). Hence His Church was meant to be for 
all nations, and this is confirmed by the miracle of tongues on the 
first Pentecost. The Catholic Church is universal; her teaching 
applies to all people, the polished Greek, the victorious Eoman, the 
rude barbarian as well as to the outcast slave. At present the Catholic 
Church is spread over the whole world. " Heretics are everywhere," 
said St. Augustine, " but no particular heresy is everywhere." The 
Church has about 260,000,000 members, hence it is more widespread 
than any other religion, and is continually sending missionaries to 
the heathen. Can, then, any Church which depends entirely on the 
government, as, for instance, the Russian Church, or the Anglican, 
which is wholly national in England, be the true Chui'ch ? or can 
one which has no real success among the heathen have a claim to 
truth ? 

4. The true Church is Apostolic; i.e., she comes down from 
the time of the apostles, her teaching is always what it was in 
the time of the apostles, and her ministers are legitimate suc- 
cessors of the apostles. 

The Church is built on the foundation of the apostles of which 
Christ is the corner-stone (Eph. ii. 20). " That is the true Church," 
says St. Jerome, "which was founded by the apostles and endures 
unto the present day." The Catholic Church is Apostolic; it has 
lasted nineteen hundred years, Luther himself confessed that it was 
the oldest. The teaching of the oldest of the Fathers agrees per- 
fectly with our Catechism, and our services are substantially the 
same as those of the first ages. 

The consideration of these notes and marks has, in the course 
of acres, led many of the noblest of men into the bosom of the 
Catholic Church. 

It is remarkable that men of the greatest learning and virtue 
have, evea in the face of great sacrifices, entered the Catholic 
Church, while those who have deserted it have generally shown by 



Tlie Apostles' Creed, 245 

their lives what they really were. We have reason to rejoice in our 
religion that it offers us such special consolation in trouble and at 
the hour of death. Thus Melancthon wrote to his Catholic mother : 
" The Protestant faith is the best one to live in, but the Catholic is 
the best to die in," and again: "The new religion makes the best 
show, the Catholic gives most security." 

8. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH ALONE GIVES 
SALVATION. 

In other words : " Outside the Catholic Church there is no salva- 
tion." 

1. The Catholic Church alone gives salvation; i.e., the Catho- 
lic Church alone possesses those means which lead to salvation, 
viz., the doctrine of Christ, the means of salvation appointed by 
Christ, and the teachers and guides of the Church established by 
Christ. 

The Church cannot teach that truth and error lead equally well 

to salvation; she makes no declaration as to who is saved, but states 
only what is necessary for salvation. The judgment of particular 
individuals is left to the God Who searches hearts (Ps. vii. 10). 
Her doctrine is not a declaration of intolerance to the individual, but 
of intolerance of error, such an intolerance as God Himself expressed 
when He forbade false gods to appear before Him (1 Cor. v.). So far 
is the Church from hating those outside her pale that in her public 
prayers on Good Friday she begs God's mercy for them. The perse- 
cutions of the Middle Ages fonned no part of the work of the 
Church, which desired not the death, but the conversion of the sinner ; 
it was the civil power which used force to repress heretics, because 
as a rule they disturbed the public peace and morality. The Church 
is the way to salvation ; it differs in this respect from the synagogue ; 
the latter merely pointed out the way of salvation in the distant 
future, while the Church claims itself to be the true way. The 
Catholic Church is distinct from the heretical churches which have 
corrupted Christ's doctrine and have rejected the means of grace, 
especially Mass and penance. Their way is a roundabout way, or 
the wrong way. " The further one goes out of the right path," says 
St. Augustine, " the further he is from the goal of his journey." 

2. Hence every man is bound to become a member of the 
Catholic Church. 

Some will say that a man ought not to change his religion; 
they might just as well argue that a man may keep an inheritance 
which his father obtained unjustly. Others say: "One faith is as 
good as another, and all lead equally well to heaven." This is to pro- 
fess indifferentism. It is certain that one religion only can be the 
true one, i.e., the one revealed by God; and reason alone would tell 
us that the truth is what we should aim at. It is absurd to suppose 
that God is unconcerned whether man adore Him or sticks and 
stones, or whether Christ be regarded as His Son or as a blasphemer. 
Why should Christ, and after Him the apostles, preach the Gospel 



246 Faith, 

amid so much persecution, if it were of no moment what a man be- 
lieved ? Why were the apostles so vehement in denouncing those who 
perverted the teaching of Christ (Gal. i. 8; 2 John i. 10) ? Why 
should God have converted Saul, and sent an angel to Cornelius ? 
The apostles gave the reason : " There is no other name under 
heaven given to men whereby we must be saved" (Acts iv. 12). 
And Christ said : " I am the way, the truth and the life. No man 
Cometh to the Father but by Me" (John xiv. 6). Hence it is that so 
many eminent people enter the Church, despite the sacrifices en- 
tailed. Queen Christina, the only daughter of Gustavus Adolphus of 
Sweden, the arch-enemy of the Catholics, studied the Catholic 
teaching and was persuaded of its truth; and as the laws of the land 
forbade her to practise her faith, she resigned her crown and spent 
the rest of her days in Rome. So, too, in the beginning of the cen- 
tury Count Stolberg resigned his post on his conversion. In England 
during the last few decades very many most distinguished men have 
entered the Church, especially Cardinals l!^ewman and Manning. 
Even from Judaism there have been remarkable conversions, as, e.g., 
those of Ratisbonne and Liebermann. 

3. Whoever through his own fault remains outside the Church 
will not be saved. 

A man who, knowing the Catholic Church to be the true one, 
leaves it, say, to make a good marriage, or to push on his business, 
or for some such unworthy motive, will not be saved; so, too, of the 
man who from a cowardly fear of the reproaches or the disesteem of 
others, does not enter the Church. The same is true of the man who 
having solid doubts as to whether his Church is the true one, takes no 
pains to find out the truth. Such as these love the darkness better 
than the light (John iii. 19). " He cannot have God for a Father, 
who has not the Church for a Mother," says St. Cyprian. " He who 
has not Christ for a Head," are the words of St. Augustine, " eannot 
be saved; and he who does not belong to the body of Christ, i.e., to 
the Church of Christ, has not Christ for his Head." " He who breaks 
away from the Church separates himseK from Christ" (Council of 
Later an, iv.). 

If, however, a man, through no fault of his own, remains 
outside the Church, he may be saved if he lead a God-fearing 
life; for such a one is to all intents and purposes a member of 
the Catholic Church. 

The majority of men who have been brought up in heresy think 
that they belong to the true Church ; their error is not due to hatred of 
God. A man who leads a good life and has the love of God in his 
heart, really belongs to the Church, and such a one is saved, not by his 
heresy, but by belonging to the Church. St. Peter said : " In every na- 
tion he that feareth God and worketh justice is acceptable to Him" 
(Acts X. 35). "The Catholic Church," says St. Gregory the Great, 
" embraces all the just from Abel to the last of the elect at the end of 
the world." All who lived up to their lights were Christians, though 
they might have been looked upon as godless, as, e.g., Socrates among 
the Greeks, Abraham and Elias among the Jews. They do not belong 



The Apostles' Creed. 347 

to the body of the Church, that is, they are not externally in union 
with the Church, but they are of the soul of the Church, i.e., they 
have the sentiments which the members of the Church should have. 

Thus the Catholic Church has members both visible and in- 
visible. 

The visible members are those who have been received into the 
Church by Baptism. The following are not members: The unbap- 
tized (heathens, Jews, Mohammedans), formal heretics (Protestants), 
and schismatics (the Greeks), those who are excommunicated. The 
invisible members are those who without any fault of their own are 
outside the Church leading God-fearing lives. 

The visible members of the Church are called living or dead 
members, according as they are in the state of sanctifying grace 
or not. 

It is an error to think that those who have fallen into grave sin 
are no longer members of the Church. The Church is like a field, 
in which grow both wheat and cockle (Matt. xiii. 24), or like a net 
which contains fish both good and bad (Matt. xiii. 47). It is not 
enough to belong to the Church; a man should also live up to his 
belief, otherwise " is membership will help only to his greater con- 
demnation. 



9. THE RELATIONS BETWEEN CHURCH AND STATE, 

The State might be defined as an institution having for its end 
the promotion of the temporal well-being of its members. Church and 
State have similar ends in view, but the Church looks mainly to the 
eternal welfare of its members. Both have their power from God, 
the Church holding hers from Christ, while the State receives its 
powers, not from an assembly of men, but from God (Leo XIII.). 
There are various points of difference between Church and State: 
the Church is one, while States are many; the State includes 
one or more nations, the Church embraces all the nations of the 
earth; States grow up and pass away, the Church remains forever. 
The Church recognizes every form of existing government, for there 
is nothing in the various forms that contradicts Catholic teaching 
(Leo XIIL). Hence Leo XIII. has frequently enjoined on the 
French monarchists to recognize and support the existing republic. 
Christ Himself taught that what was Caesar's should be given to 
Caesar (Matt. xxii. 21). 

1. The Church is, in its own department, absolutely inde- 
pendent of the State, for Christ left the teaching and government 
of His Church to the apostles and their successors, not to any 
temporal sovereign. 

Hence the State has no claim to dictate to Christians what they 
are to believe and reject, nor to instruct priests what they are to 
preach, nor how and when they are to give the sacraments, say Mass, 
etc. Such interference has always been resented by the Church; 



248 Faith, 

thus Hosius, at the Council of Nicsea, addressed the Roman emperor 
when the latter was meddling in matters of faith : " Here you have no 
right to dictate to us ; it is rather your duty to follow our commands." 
The State, too, is in its own affairs independent of the Church. 
" The power of the State as well as that of the Church is circum- 
scribed by limits within which it can work uncontrolled" (Leo 
XIII.). There are many points however where these limits touch; 
hence a mutual agreement is necessary on both sides. If contrary 
orders were given in the same matter strife would arise, and the 
subject would not know where his duty lay (Leo XIII.). Between 
the two powers there should be some such union as there is 
between the body and soul in man (Leo XIIL). Agreements 
between State and Church are of frequent occurrence in his- 
tory : they are called Concordats. These are often conspicuous proofs 
of the tender love of the Church in pushing her mildness and toler- 
ation as far as is consistent with her duty (Leo XIIL). 

2. The Church is an essential factor in promoting the welfare 
of the State, for she teaches obedience to authority, prevents many 
crimes, incites men to noble endeavor, and unites together various 
nations. 

Plutarch speaks of religion forming a better protection for a city 
than its walls. The Church teaches that the civil authority has its 
power from God (Rom. xiii. 1), and that even wicked rulers are to 
be obeyed (1 Pet. ii. 18). How many sinners have been rescued by 
the Church and changed into saints and benefactors of mankind ! 
How many have been restrained from crime by the teaching of the 
Church, or God's judgments! How much unjustly acquired property 
has been restored, and how many enemies reconciled ! More than 
this, the Church teaches that salvation depends on works of mercy, 
and makes it a point of duty for her members to assist their suffer- 
ing brethren. How many institutions for orphans, for the sick and 
blind and deaf-mutes, etc., owe their foundation to the servants of the 
Church ! Indeed, the needy are the Church's first care. Moreover the 
Church binds the nations together in the bonds of brotherhood, both 
by a common profession of faith and by the precept of charity. 
Hence it is that as far as possible the priests of the Church should 
keep aloof from all strife between nations. 

In consequence of this all good rulers and statesmen have 
supported the Church to the best of their power. 

Such was the policy of Constantino the Great, of Charlemagne, 
of St. Stephen, King of Hungary, and St. Wenceslaus, King of 
Bohemia. Rulers who reject the Church saw at the branch which 
supports them; the people see in them no longer the representatives 
of God but merely the elected of the people removable at the people's 
will. 

The States which have persecuted the Church have always 
sooner or later experienced the evil results of so doing. 

Our Lord's words are very apt here : " Every kingdom divided 
against itself shall be brought to desolation" (Luke xi. 17). Re- 



The Apostles' Creed. 249 

ligion is to the State what the soul is to the body. " The nation and 
the kingdom that will not serve Thee shall perish" (Is. Ix. 12). 
" The surest sign of ruin in a State," writes Machiavelli, " is when 
religion is neglected." The fall of the great Roman empire and the 
horrors of the French revolution may be traced to the same cause. 
Even Napoleon confessed that no nation could be governed without 
religion. The absence of religion means the introduction of crime: 
" There is no knowledge of God in the land. Cursing, and lying, and 
killing, and theft, and adultery have overflowed" (Osee iv. 1, 2). 
Our prisons are filled with people who for the most part neglect relig- 
ion. 

3. The Church was, from the earliest times, the patron of true 
education and culture. 

It is to the interest of the Church to promote culture. Ignorance 
and immorality are usually close companions. The» world is a book 
displaying the wisdom of God; the more we know of this book, the 
more we shall know of God, and the more will our love for Him be 
increased. Hence it is the duty of the Church to encourage scientific 
research (Leo XIIL). It was Christianity which tamed the wild 
nations of Europe, civilizing them and making them the rulers of 
ether peoples (Leo XIIL). "Had the Church been established with 
the view of ministering to the temporal wants of man, it could not 
have conferred greater benefits than it has done," is the judgment of 
St. Augustine on the work of the Church. 

It was the Church which first charged itself with the educa- 
tion of the young and founded the first schools. 

The schools of the monastery, cathedral and parish in the time 
of Charlemagne owed their origin to the Church. Most of the uni- 
versities owe their existence to the Pope. Whole Orders of Religious, 
such as the Benedictines, Jesuits, Christian Brothers and others de- 
vote themselves to the education of youth. The success of the Jesuits 
was acknowledged even by their enemies, and in spite of their sup- 
pression in 1773 Frederick of Prussia, and Catherine of Russia, 
neither of them Catholics, retained them to instruct the youth of 
their kingdoms. 

It was the Church which rescued the great works of an- 
tiquity from destruction. 

The monks of the Middle Ages transcribed the works of the 
heathen philosophers and historians, thus preserving them to pos- 
terity. The great libraries of the monasteries, as well as the 
museums and libraries of the Popes, preserved many treasures. We 
might remark, too, that the Benedictines have produced sixteen 
thousand authors and the Jesuits, in their comparatively short exist- 
ence, twelve thousand. 

It was the Church which, from early times, raised the noblest 
buildings. 

Such a structure, for instance, as St. Peter's in Rome, which was 
one hundred and ten years in building, or the Cathedral at Cologne, 



250 Faith, 

begun in 1249 and finished in 1880. ISTot to mention the glorious struc- 
tures to be seen all over the Continent, in Germany, France, Spain, 
Italy. England is filled with magnificent buildings like Westminster, 
Lincoln, York, Durham, etc. A large proportion of the finest edifices 
in the United States are Catholic churches. 

It was the Church which from the earliest times gave the 
greatest encouragem.eiit to the fine arts. 

We owe Plain Chant or Gregorian to St. Ambrose, Bishop of 
Milan (397 a.d.) and St. Gregory the Great (604 A.D.), and its devel- 
opments to many other artists. It was the Popes who encouraged men 
like Palestrina (1594). Twice in its history the Church resisted the 
Iconoclast (or image-breaking) movement, at Nicgea in 787, and at 
Trent in 1563. Artists of world-wide fame, such as Leonardo da 
Vinci (1519), Eaphael (1520), Michael Angelo (1564), Correggio 
(1564), Canova (1822), etc., owed much of their success to the sup- 
port of the Popes. It was the cloister which produced some of the 
finest artists and their works. 

It was the Church which made whole tracts of land fertile 
and habitable. 

The work of the Benedictines and Cistercians in the way of 
clearing and draining land and developing agriculture was especially 
conspicuous in the German forests. The same work is carried on in 
savage countries now by the Trappists and other religious Orders. 

It is to priests and monks that we owe some of the greatest 
discoveries. 

The Deacon Flavio Gioja discovered the magnet and compass in 
1300 ; Veit, a monk of Arezzo, discovered the scale, the rules of music 
and harmony; the Dominican Spina the use of spectacles; the Fran- 
ciscan Berthold Schwarz gunpowder (1300) ; the Jesuit Kircher ex- 
hibited the first burning glass (1646) ; Copernicus, a canon of Frau- 
enberg discovered his famous system (1507) ; the Jesuit Cavaliere 
the components of white light (1647) ; the Spanish Benedictine Pon- 
tius invented a method of teaching deaf-mutes (1570) ; the Jesuit 
Lana a way of teaching the blind to read (1687) ; and the Jesuit 
Secchi (1878) made many discoveries with regard to sun-spots. 
Only lately the Dominican Calandoni invented a type-setter tO' re- 
place the compositor. The enemies of the Church are always crying 
her down as opposed to progress, enlightenment and freedom. 

10. TEE COMMUNION OF SAINTS. 

The members of the Church may be divided into three classes: 
those who are still on the earth, " having not here a lasting city, but 
seeking the one that is to come " (Heb. xiii. 14) ; those who have 
reached their goal in heaven, the saints; and those who are expiat- 
ing their sins in purgatory. All are " fellow citizens with the saints 
and domestics of God," working together for the same object of 
union with God. The members of this great community are called 
" saints " because all are sanctified by Baptism (1 Cor. vi. 11), and 



TJie Apostles' Creed. 251 

are called to a holy life (1 Thess. iv. 3). Those in heaven have al- 
ready attained to perfect holiness. Yet St. Paul calls the Christians 
still on earth " saints " (Eph. i. 1). 

1. The communion of saints is the union and intercourse of 
Catholics on earth, of the souls in purgatory, and of the saints in 
heaven. 

The Church on earth is called the Church Militant, because of its 
ceaseless struggle with its three enemies, the world, the flesh, and the 
devil. The souls in purgatory form the Church Suffering, because 
they are still expiating their sins in the cleansing fire. The blessed 
in heaven are called the Church Triumphant, because they have al- 
ready secured their victory. These three divisions are one Church 
by the conunon bond of Baptism. 

2. Catholics on earth, the souls in purgatory, and the blessed 
in heaven are united with Christ, just as are the members of a 
body with the head (Rom. xii. 4). 

The Holy Spirit works in all the members (1 Cor. xii. 13). 
" The soul," says St. Augustine, " animates all the organs of the body, 
and causes the eye to see, the ear to hear, etc;" just so does the 
Holy Spirit work in the members of Christ^s body; and as the Holy 
Spirit proceeds from Christ, Christ is the head of the Christian 
body (Col. i. 18). He is the vine carrying strength and nourish- 
ment to the branches (John xv. 5). Each member of the body has 
its own special functions, so each member of the Church has his own 
gifts (1 Cor. xii. 6-10, 28). Each member of the body works for 
the whole body; so every member of the Church works for the 
common good. All the members of the body share the pain or 
pleasure felt by one, and the same is true of the mutual sympathy 
of the communion of saints: "If one member suffer anything, all 
the members suffer with it; or, if one member glory, all the members 
rejoice with it" (1 Cor. xii. 26). Thus the saints in heaven are not 
indifferent to our condition. Catholics who have fallen into mortal 
sin are still members of this great body, though dead members; 
but they cease to be members if they are excommunicated. 

3. All the members of the communion of saints have a share 
in the spiritual goods of the Catholic Church, and can help one an- 
other by their prayers and other good works. The saints alone 
in heaven have no need of help. 

In a similar manner all the people of a country have a share in 
the institutions supported by the country, such as hospitals, asylums, 
law courts, etc. So also, in the family circle, all the members have a 
claim to share in the common goods, such as riches or honors. Thus 
all the Masses, the means of grace, the prayers of the Church, and 
all the good works done by individuals, are for the benefit of all its 
members. In the Our Father we pray for others as well as for 
ourselves; holy Mass is offered for the dead as well as the living, 
and the same is true of the Office recited by the priest. Hence 
it is that one may have more hope of converting the greatest sinner 
who still belongs to the Church than a Freemason who outwardly 



252 Faith 

leads a good life, yet who is cut off from it; and a Catholic may look 
forward to a quicker release from purgatory than others. St. Francis 
Xavier constantly cheered himself with the thought that the Church 
was praying for him, and supporting him with her good works. More- 
over, all the members of the Church can give mutual help. There is 
the same sympathy as in the human body, where a sound member 
comes to the help of one that is weaker, and the possession of good 
lungs, a sound heart, or healthy stomach, may help the body to re- 
cover from what might otherwise have been a fatal illness. The 
eye does not act for itself alone; it guides the hands and feet. 
Sodom would have been saved had ten just men been found within 
its walls. 

1. All Catholics can help each other by prayer and good 
works. 

St. Peter was freed from prison by the prayers of the Christians. 
" The prayer of St. Stephen," says St. Augustine, " procured the 
conversion of St. Paul." The tears and prayers of St. Monica con- 
verted her son. Even in the Old Testament God promised that He 
would be merciful to the prayers of the priest (Lev. iv. 20). St. 
J ames bids us : " Pray one for another, that you may be saved " ( Jas. 
V. 16), and St. Paul: " I beseech you . . . help me in your prayers for 
me to God" (Kom. xv. 30). Christ revealed to Marie Lataste that 
as Esther saved her people by her intercession with Assuerus, so the 
prayers of a single soul may save a whole nation from the avenging 
hand of God. Prayer is a work of mercy, and brings down a blessing 
on the one who prays and the one who is prayed for. Easting and 
almsgiving are also means of help. As a man's debts may be paid 
cff by his neighbor, so the debt of sin may in some measure be paid 
off by the good works of others ; and thus it was in the early Church 
that penances were often remitted or shortened at the intercession 
of the martyrs. 

2. "We can also help the holy souls m purgatory by prayers 
and other good works ; they in turn can help us by their prayers, 
especially when they reach heaven. 

The Jews even believed that help could be given to the souls 
of the departed; for we read (2 Mach. xii.) how Judas Machabeus 
caused sacrifices to be offered for those who had fallen in battle, and 
sent money to the Temple for that purpose. The passing-bell and 
the knell are signals to pray for the dying and the dead. In the 
Memento after the Consecration at Mass a special petition is made for 
the departed. " Prayer," says St. Augustine, " is the key by which 
we open the gates of heaven to the suffering souls." The prayers of 
the living, especially holy Mass, almsdeeds, and other works of 
piety are of great efficacy in lessening the sufferings of the holy 
souls (Council of Lyons, 1274). The souls in purgatoi-y can also help 
us. Many saints held that we can call the holy souls to our help 
(Bellarmine; St. Alphonsus). St. Catherine of Bologna (1463), used 
often to call upon the holy souls when the saints seemed to f«il in 
helping her, and she never asked them in vain. 

3. The saints in heaven can help us by their prayers before 



Tlie Apostles' Creed. 253 

the throne of God (Apoc. viii. 4), especially if we call upon them 
for help. 

The saints must know much of what happens on earth, for their 
happiness consists in the complete satisfaction of all their desires. 
The devil knows all our weaknesses, as we know from the way in 
which he tempts us. The prophets of the Old Testament sometimes 
foretold future events, and knew the most hidden things; is it likely 
that the saints are less favored than they? They rejoice when a 
sinner is converted (Luke xv. 7). "What can escape those," says 
St. Thomas Aquinas, " who see Him Who sees all things ? " And 
the Church teaches us that when we call upon the saints for their 
prayers, they join their prayers to ours. Their intercession has 
great efficacy, for the " continual prayer of a just man even on the 
earth availeth much" (Jas. v. 16). What power Abraham had when 
pleading for Sodom ! (Gen. xviii.) "If," says St. Jerome, "the 
saints had such power when in the flesh, what can they not obtain 
for us now that they have secured their victory ? " St. John Chrys- 
ostom compares their intercession to the pleading of old soldiers 
who display their wounds. This power has often been demonstrated 
by miracles. 

Our dead relatives and friends, who are in heaven, are always 
pleading for us at the throne of God, and often save us from 
danger. 

" Charity never dies " (1 Cor. xiii. 8), and the ties which bind 
us to those we love remain unbroken by death. Even in hell the 
wretched Dives showed he had some affection still for his relatives on 
earth (Luke xvi. 27). The prophet Jeremias, and the holy high 
priest Onias, prayed in limbo for the Jewish nation (2 Mach. xv. 
14) ; and Christ promised His apostles that He would pray for them 
(John xiv. 16; 1 John ii. 1). St. Augustine, after the death of his 
mother St. Monica, and St. Wenceslaus after the death of his grand- 
mother St. Ludmilla rapidly advanced to greater heights of sanc- 
tity. So too the saints help the souls in purgatory. " Our Lady 
alone rescues daily some souls from purgatory by her prayers." 
On the anniversary of the Assumption of Our Lady thousands of 
souls are delivered from their prison (St. Peter Damian; St. Alphon- 
sus). On Saturdays, the day specially dedicated to Our Lady, she 
rescues many poor souls from purgatory (John XXIL, Sabbatine 
Bull). ISTor are the holy angels indifferent to their future companions; 
one of the Church's prayers speaks of St. Michael leading souls into 
heaven. Our angel guardian, and the angels whom we have specially 
honored on earth, will take up our cause in purgatory. 

TENTH ARTICLE OF THE CREED : THE FORGIVENESS 

OF SINS. 

(See the chapter on Sin, page 449.) 



254 Faith. 



ELEVENTH AND TWELFTH AETICLES OF THE CEEED: 
THE LAST THINGS. 

1, DEATH. 

Every day some eighty-eight thousand men die ; that is, one death 
per second. 

1. At death the soul is separated from the body, and enters the 
world of spirits; the body decays, and falls into dust. 

St. Paul speaks of death as a dissolution (2 Tim. iv. 6), and St. 
Peter calls the body a tabernacle of the soul (2 Pet. i. 14). The 
body is, as it were, a shell through which the soul breaks to enter in 
its new life. " The soul is freed from its prison at death," is the ex- 
pression of St. Augustine. The body, deprived of the soul, is no 
longer alive, because it has no longer the principle of life. At death 
the spirit returns to the God Who gave it (Eccles. xii. 7). "Death," 
says St. John Chrysostom, " is a journey into eternity." Hence it is 
wrong to believe with the ancient Egyptians that the soul is joined 
to other forms, whether human or animal ; and those too are mistaken 
who think that the soul enters into a sort of sleep till the day of 
judgment. After death the body returns to the dust from which it 
came (Gen. iii. 19) ; exception was made, however, in the case of the 
bodies of Christ and of His blessed Mother ; and the bodies of some of 
the saints have been preserved free from corruption to the present day. 
At the last day our bodies will all rise again. Death is represented 
symbolically as a skeleton carrying a scythe, with which he cuts 
short our lives as the reaper mows the grass of the field (Ps. cii. 15) ; 
he is also represented carrying a key to open to us the gates of ever- 
lasting life. 

2. All men must die, because death is the consequence of 
original sin. 

Our first parents lost by their sin the gift of immortality, and as 
a consequence we all have to die. " By one man sin entered into the 
world and by sin death ; and so death passed upon all men, in whom 
all have sinned" (Pom. v. 12). Death is the punishment of man's 
ambition to be as God. Henoch (Gen. v. 24) and Elias (4 Kings ii. 
11) alone were removed from earth without dying, and they are to 
return before the Last Day, and then die; St. Thomas teaches that 
even those who survive till the Day of Judgment shall die. Christ 
alone was not under the law of death because He was free from all 
sin ; His death for us was a purely voluntary act. " Life," says St. 
John Chrysostom, " is a play in which for a short time one man 
represents a judge, another a general, and so on; after the play no 
further account is made of the dignity which each one had." We 
are all like so many chess-men, who at the beginning of the game 
have our fixed places on the board, but at the end are all tumbled 
into a box. The rich man cannot take his riches along with him 
(Job xxvii. 15). After death many who have been the first on earth 
shall be last, and the last first (Matt. xix. 30). Our days upon earth 



The Apostles' Creed, 255 

are but a shadow (Job viii. 9) ; our years shall be considered as a 
spider's web (Ps. Ixxxix. 9) ; life is a vapor which appeareth for a little 
while, and afterwards shall vanish away (Jas. iv. 15). The hour of 
our death is unknown to us. We shall die when we expect it not 
(Matt. xxiv. 44) ; death will come like a thief (Matt. xxiv. 43). To 
use the expression of St. Ephrem, death is like the pounce of the 
hawk, or the spring of the wolf. St. Gregory of ISTyssa compares life 
to a torch, which a slight puff of wind may put out. To some of the 
saints the hour of their death has been revealed, but from most men 
it is hidden. We see in this arrangement the action of God's wisdom 
and goodness. Since we do not know the hour of our death, we 
should always be ready to die : " Wherefore be you also ready, because 
at what hour you know not the Son of man will come " (Matt. xxiv. 
44). The parable of the ten virgins (Matt, xxv.) is another warning 
on this subject. " Death is a great lord," says St. Ephrem, " waiting 
on no one and demanding that all wait upon him." As a man lives, 
so he dies. Those who put off reforming their lives are like those 
students who begin to study when the examination is already upon 
them. 

3. Death is terrible only to the sinner, in no wise to the just. 

To the sensual and self-seeking only is death fearful, for it means 
the end of their enjoyment and the beginning of woe. " The death 
of the just man," says St. Vincent Ferrer, " is like the pruning of a 
tree preparing it to bear nobler fruit in the future; while the death 
of the sinner is the uprooting of the tree before it is cast into the 
fire." " For the just man there is no death but a passing into ever- 
lasting life." The saints rejoiced in death, desiring like St. Paul 
to be dissolved and to be with Christ (Phil. i. 23). St. John Chrysos- 
tom compares the desire of the saints for death with that of a traveller 
for the end of his journey, or a farmer for his harvest; in another 
place he speaks of death as of a change from a tumbledown cottage 
to a beautiful mansion. " O how sweet it is to die, if one's life has 
been a good one ! " exclaims St. Augustine. It is not the kind of 
death, but the state of the soul that is important : " As the tree falls 
so shall it lie," says Holy Writ (Eccles. xi. 3); so it is with man: 
as his will was directed on earth, so shall it be directed after death. 
Happy the man whose will has been always fixed on God; in other 
words who has in his heart the love of God and sanctifying grace; 
he will see God. Unhappily, many are bent solely on things of the 
earth, those, for instance, who love the world and are not in the state 
of grace ; they remain separated from God forever. 

4. In order to secure a happy death, we should in our daily 
prayer ask God to grant us a happy death, and of our o'vvn accord 
detach ourselves now from earthly goods and pleasures. 

He dies a happy death who is reconciled with God, and has put 
his worldly affairs in order. We ought often to pray that God may 
give us the grace to receive the last sacraments before dying. It is 
also a duty to make a will in good time; to do this is to behave like 
a prudent captain who heaves his cargo overboard to avoid ship- 
wreck. A sudden death is not a thing to be desired, for we cannot 



256 Faith, 

then put into order our spiritual or temporal affairs ; hence we pray in 
the Litanies : " From a sudden and unprovided death deliver us, O 
Lord." The Church often recalls the thought of death, on All Souls, 
Ash Wednesday, by the passing-bell, etc. The thought of death is 
useful for keeping us out of sin : " In all thy works remember thy 
last end, and thou shalt never sin " (Ecclus. vii. 40). Whoever thinks 
seriously of death will take as little pleasure in the things of the 
world as the condemned criminal in a good meal; he is another 
Damocles, with the sword hanging over him by a hair. Every day's 
sunset is a reminder from God of death, and sleep is an image of it. 
We ought to detach ourselves even now from earthly goods and 
pleasures. After death our eyes will no longer see, nor our ears 
hear, nor our tongues speak; and we should prepare for that state 
by our voluntary restraint now. We should crush the curiosity of 
the eyes and the ears, our unruly speech and inordinate enjoyment 
of good, following the counsel of St. Basil : " Let us die that we may 
live." The good works which the Church imposes on us, such as 
prayer, fasting, and almsdeeds, are nothing but a loosening of the 
heart from earthly ties. Only those who have this detachment shall 
see God after death : " Blessed are the clean of heart for they shall 
see God" (Matt. v. 8). 

2, THE PARTICULAR JUDGMENT. 

1. Immediately after death follows the particular judgment. 

" As soon as the soul leaves the body," says St. Augustine, " it is 
judged." We learn from the parable of Dives and Lazarus that both 
were judged immediately after death. St. Paul tells us : " It is ap- 
pointed unto man once to die, and after this the judgment" (Heb. 
ix. 27). In the hour of death God will say to us: " Give an account 
of thy stewardship" (Luke xvi. 2). After judgment comes the 
sentence. If God has ordained that the workman should not be 
kept waiting for his wage, it is not likely that He will delay to reward 
him who has labored faithfully. " Death is the reward of merit, the 
crown of the harvest" (St. Ambrose). 

Christ will sit as Judge in the particular judgment. He will 
examine our whole lives, and will deal with us as we have dealt 
with our fellow-men. 

Christ will be our Judge : " For neither doth the Father judge 
any man, but hath given all judgment to the Son " (John v. 22). He 
promised His apostles at the Last Supper to return after His ascen- 
sion and take them to Himself (John xiv. 3). Evidently this meant 
at their death ; of St. John too He said : " So I will have him remain 
till I come" (John xxi. 22). The apostles rejoiced at the thought of 
seeing Christ again (1 John iii. 2) ; so long as they were in the flesh 
they were in some sense far from Christ (2 Cor. v. 6). We are not 
to imagine that the soul is led before Christ in heaven. He en- 
lightens the departed soul in such a manner that it is quite convinced 
that its Saviour has passed a true judgment upon it. " As lightninc: 
Cometh out of the east and appeareth even into the west, so shall 



Tlie Apostles* Creed. 257 

also the coining of the Son of man be " (Matt. xxiv. 27) ; that is, as 
Blessed Clement Hofbauer puts it, at our death, when Christ comes 
to us, our whole life will be revealed to us with the rapidity and 
clearness of lightning. A man's works shall be revealed at his 
death (Ecclus. xi. 29). All those who have been near to death say 
that in that moment all sorts of things long forgotten and occurring 
in cliildhood are presented to the mind. At death, too, our most 
secret deeds are brought to light : " For there is not anything secret 
that shall not be made manifest, nor hidden that shall not be 
known and come abroad" (Luke viii. 17). We must give an account 
even of every idle word that we have spoken (Matt. xii. 36). St. 
Basil compares the soul to an artist who has produced a number of 
pictures; at the hour of death the veil is removed from these, and 
they cover him with glory, or if they prove to be wretched work, con- 
demn him to disgrace. As the sun reveals to us the floating particles 
in the air, so when the Sun of justice shines into our souls we shall see 
there even our slightest faults. " On the Day of Judgment," says 
Louis of Granada, " God will wear the same aspect to us as we have 
shown in our lifetime to our neighbor." God is, as it were, a mirror, 
reflecting most perfectly the image of him who looks into it. " With 
what measure you mete, it shall be measured to you again" (Matt. 
vii. 2). 

2. After the particular judgment the souls of men go into hell, 
or heaven, or purgatory. 

We see from the parable of Dives and Lazarus that the sentence 
of the judge is carried out at once (Lul^e xvi.). The Church has de- 
fined that those who have not sinned after Baptism, and those 
who having sinned after Baptism, have expiated those sins on 
earth or in purgatory, are received at once into heaven; while 
those who die in mortal sin descend at once to hell (Council 
of Lyons, ii., 1274). St. Gregory the Great and St. Justin taught 
the same in their time. Those are in error who believe, as in the 
Greek schismatic Church, that the souls of the just have merely 
a foretaste of their blessedness after death, and have complete hap- 
piness only when they are joined to their bodies, and that the wicked 
experience full damnation only after the resurrection. They are 
very few who enter heaven at once, for : " Nothing defiled can entei 
heaven" (Apoc. xxi. 27). According to Bellarmine it is seldom even 
that a just man escapes purgatory. All have it in their power to be 
saved, but not all use their graces. After the particular judgment 
there is to be a general judgment; in the former the soul receives its 
punishment or reward for the evil or good it has done; in the latter 
the body shares in the dispensation as the instrument of the soul. 

S, HEAVEN, 
Heaven is an abode of everlasting joy. 

Christ gave His apostles on Mount Thabor some foretaste of the 
joys of heaven (Matt. xvii.). The heavens opened at the baptism 
of Christ (Matt. iii. 16). St. Stephen saw the heavens open (Acts 
vii. 55). St. Paul was rapt into the third heaven (2 Cor. xii. 2). 



258 Faith. 

Heaven is both a place and a state. Many divines teach that it is 
somewhere beyond the stars; though this view is not of faith, yet 
it has some foundation, for Christ came down from heaven, and 
ascended again to heaven. Heaven is also a state of the soul; it 
consists in the vision of the Godhead (Matt, xviii. 10), and in the 
peace and joy of the Holy Spirit (Rom. xiv. 17) ; so the angels and 
saints do not leave heaven when they come to our assistance. Christ 
is the King of heaven. He called Himself King before Pilate, 
though He maintained that His kingdom was not of this world (John 
xviii. 36) ; He was acknowledged as King by the penitent thief : 
" Lord, remember me when Thou comest into Thy kingdom " (Luke 
xxiii. 42) ; in heaven the angels worship Christ (Heb. i. 6). Heaven 
is our true home; on this earth we are but strangers (2 Cor. v. 6). 

The joys of heaven are unspeakably great: the blessed are 
free from even the slightest pain; they enjoy the vision of God 
and the friendship of all the inhabitants of heaven. 

Of the joys of heaven St. Paul writes : " Eye hath not seen, nor 
ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of man, what things 
God hath prepared for them that love Him" (1 Cor. ii. 9). "This 
happiness may be felt, but not described," says St. Augustine. And 
David addresses God : " They shall be inebriated with the plenty of 
Thy house, and Thou shalt make them drink of the torrent of Thy 
pleasure" (Ps. xxxv. 9). "The present life," says St. Gregory the 
Great, " in comparison of everlasting bliss, is more like death than 
life." We shall enjoy there the same delights as God Himself (Matt. 
XXV. 21), for we shall be made partakers of the divine nature (2 Pet. 
i. 4) and like to God (1 John iii. 2). We shall be transformed in 
heaven like the iron in the fire. In heaven there are many mansions 
(John xiv. 2) ; the kingdom of heaven is like to a banquet (Matt, 
viii. 11; Luke xiv. 16), in which Our Lord Himself waits upon the 
guests (Luke xii. 37). In heaven there is no bodily, only a spiritual 
food (Tob. xii. 19) ; there is a great light (1 Tim, vi. 16) ; there are 
heard the songs of the angels (Ps. Ixxxiii. 5). The saints are robed 
in white (Apoc. vii. 14) ; they are crowned by their Lord (Wisd. v. 
17) ; they have perfect freedom, and are set over all God's works 
(Matt. xxiv. 47). "If, O my God, Thou dost give us such beau-, 
tiful things here in our prison, what wilt Thou do in Thy palace ! " 
exclaims St. Augustine. Lastly the joys of heaven are not sensual 
(Matt. xxii. 30). The blessed are free from all suffering. "It is 
easier," says St. Augustine, "to name the evils from which the 
blessed are free than to count up their joys." They shall neither 
hunger nor thirst (Apoc. vii. 16) ; death shall be no more, nor mourn- 
ing, nor sorrow (Apoc. xxi. 4) ; and night will no more be (Apoc. 
xxii. 5). The blessed see always the face of God (Matt, xviii. 10) ; 
they see God as He is (1 John iii. 2), and face to face (1 Cor. xiii. 
12) ; nor do they see God as it were in an image, but He is as present 
to the understanding as a visible object to the eye which sees it. 
The blessed enjoy this vision not by any power of their own, but by 
a special divine operation, called the light of glory, and in conse- 
quence of this they become like to God (1 John iii. 2)» This vision 
of God is the source of untold happiness. " The blessed," says St. 
Bona venture, " rejoice more over God's blessedness than over their 



Tlie Apostles' Creed, 2$9 

own." " If the contemplation of creation is so sweet," says St. Charles 
Borromeo, " how much more so must be the contemplation of the 
Creator ! " With the knowledge of God is necessarily linked the love 
of God, and increase of one means increase of the other. Hence 
this great joy banishes all sadness. The blessed in heaven also love one 
another; they are as one (John xvii. 21). " The love of the elect in 
paradise," says Blessed Suso, " is so great that souls removed at an 
infinite distance from one another love with a greater affection than 
that which exists between parent and child." " It is love alone," says 
St. Augustine, " which separates the children of the eternal kingdom 
from the children of perdition. What happiness to meet again our 
relations and friends after so long and painful a separation ! " 

The jojs of heaven last forever. 

Christ says : " The just will enter into everlasting life." The Holy 
Spirit will be united with them forever (John xiv. 16). This joy no 
man can take from them (John xvi. 22). No one can snatch them 
from the hand of the Father (John x. 29). Great kings and princes 
support their dependents even when these are no longer capable of 
rendering service; surely God, Who is the King of kings, will not 
be less generous. His reward is eternal, the only one worthy of Him. 
Were it not so, the joy of heaven would be incomplete from the fear 
of its coming to an end. 

1. The happiness of the blessed varies according to their 
merits. 

The master in the gospel of St. Luke (xix. 16, etc.), gave to the 
servant who had used his ten talents to gain other ten talents the com- 
mand of ten cities, and to the one who had successfully used his five 
talents the command of five cities. Thus God acts, and in so doing 
acts with the greatest justice. St. Paul says : " He who soweth spar- 
ingly shall also reap sparingly, and he who soweth in blessings shall 
also reap of blessings" (2 Cor. ix. 6). The just see in heaven the 
triune God, yet some see Him more perfectly than others according to 
their merits (Council of Florence). "One is the glory of the sun 
[Christ], another the glory of the moon [Mary], and another the 
glory of the stars [the saints] " (1 Cor. xv. 41). The knowledge and 
love of God are greater in one saint and less in another; and the 
same is true of the joy of heaven. Men are intended to take the 
place of the fallen angels, and of these there are some from all 
the nine choirs of angels. The degree of glory in heaven depends on 
the amount of sanctifying grace which a man has at his death 
(Eccles. xi. 3) ; in other words the degree of glory is greater in pro- 
portion as a man has at his death more of the Holy Spirit, or more 
of the love of God in his heart. The degree of glory in the blessed 
cannot be increased nor diminished throughout eternity; yet there 
are accidental delights, as for instance when special honor is paid to 
a saint. Our Lord revealed that there is a particular joy in heaven 
when a sinner is converted (Luke xv. 7). The canonization, beati- 
fication, the feast day of a saint on earth, the prayers, the holy 
sacrifice, and other good works which the faithful perform on earth 
in honor of a saint are a special source of joy to that saint. St. 
Gertrude saw on such occasions the saints clothed in more resplen- 



260 Faith. 

dent raiment, and surrounded by a glorious escort; they seemed 
also to be raised to a state of greater bliss. Yet among the blessed 
there is no envy. They are all children of one Father and have re- 
ceived their ijortion from Him (Matt. xx). To use the homely illus- 
tration of St. Francis de Sales: two children receive from their 
father a piece of cloth to make a garment; the smaller child will not 
envy his brother the bigger garment, but will be quite satisfied with 
the one that fits him. So it is in heaven, and more than this, each 
one rejoices over the happiness of the other as though it were in 
some measure his own. 

2. Only those souls enter heaven which are free from all sin, 
and from the penalty due to sin. 

According to the Council of Florence, the souls only of those 
who after Baptism have not sinned, or who, if they have sinned, have 
done perfect penance on earth or in purgatory, can enter heaven. 
" E'othing defiled can enter heaven " (Apoc. xxi. 27). Moreover none 
could enter heaven before the death of Christ ; they had to remain in 
limbo. 

3. Heaven is won by suffering and self-denial. 

St. Paul writes : " By many tribulations must we enter the king- 
dom of God" (Acts xiv. 21), and Christ's words are: " He that loveth 
his life shall lose it, and he that hateth his life in this world keepeth 
it unto life eternal" (John xii. 25), i.e., he who goes after all the 
joys and pleasures of this world will be damned, and he who despises 
them will be saved. There is no blessedness without self-denial. The 
kingdom of heaven is like a treasure or a costly pearl; whoever will 
possess it must give his all for it (Matt. xiii. 44-46), i.e., he must 
give up all inordinate attachment to the things of this world. " The 
kingdom of heaven suffers violence " (Matt. xi. 12). " Narrow is the 
gate and straight is the way that leadeth to life " (Matt. vii. 14). He 
wins the prize in the race who runs swiftly and steadily, and refrains 
from all things (1 Cor. ix. 25). He who would be among the blessed 
must be a martyr at least in intention. The greater efforts we make 
to secure salvation, the greater will be our joy. 

4. For the just heaven begins already on earth. 

" While we seek life eternal we already enjoy it," says St. Augus- 
tine. The just have the true peace (John xiv. 28) ; they have the 
peace of God which surpasses all understanding (Phil. iv. 7) ; hence 
they are joyful even when fasting (Matt. vi. 17), and in the midst 
of sufferings (Matt. v. 12). The just possess the Holy Ghost, hence 
they are, even while still on earth united with God (1 John iv. 16). 
Christ ever dwells in their hearts (Eph. iii. 17) ; they have within 
them the kingdom of God (Luke xvii. 21). "Think of the reward 
and thou wilt suffer with joy," says St. Augustine. The sufferings 
of this world are not to be compared with the glory which shall be 
manifested unto us (Eom. viii. 18). "If we think of the joys of 
heaven, the things of this world will appear worthless" (St. Gregory 
the Great). "He who stands on a hill-top," says St. John Chrysos- 
tom, " either does not see objects in the valley, or they appear to him 
very small." 



The Apostles' Creed. 261 



4. EELL, 

1. Hell is the abode of everlasting torment. 

The unhappy rich man of the Gospel prayed Abraham to send 
one from the dead to his brothers " that they might not come to this 
place of torments" (Luke xvi. 28). In His discourse on the general 
judgment Christ speaks of hell as "everlasting punishment" (Matt. 
XXV. 46). Hell is both a place and a state. As a place it is situated 
beneath the earth. Hence the expression in the Creed "Descended 
into hell " ; and we call hell an abyss. In the exorcisms we find the 
expression : " God has cast you from the heights of heaven into the 
bowels of the earth." Hell is sharply defined from heaven; between 
them yawns a chasm (Luke xvi. 26). The lost are separated from 
the saints (Matt. xxiv. 51). With good reason St. John Chrysostom 
exhorts us not to inquire so much where hell is as how to avoid it. 
Hell is a state, and moreover the continuation of that same state 
in which the sinner is found at death. " Thus," says St. John 
Damascene, " the pains of hell are due not so much to God as to man 
himself." Since hell is also a state, it is quite clear that the evil 
spirits may be near to us (1 Pet. v. 8), and even dwell in sinners 
(Matt. xii. 45). Even the pagans believed in a hell; hence the story of 
Tantalus, condemned to suffer perpetual hunger and thirst, and 
unable to satisfy either, because the water which he tried to drink 
or the fruit which he attempted to eat withdrew from his lips; the 
Danaids, condemned to draw water in sieves, and Sisyphus, forced 
ever to push a great rock to the top of a hill only to see it roll down 
again, furnish other examples of this belief. 

The torments of hell are terrible; for the damned never see 
God, they are in the company of evil spirits and in fire, they en- 
dure great anguish of mind, and after the resurrection will have 
to suffer in their bodies. 

St. Paul says: "It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of 
the living God " (Heb. x. 31). St. John of the Cross teaches us that 
as a hundredfold is promised for every sacrifice that is made, so 
for every unlawful pleasure indulged in, a hundredfold penalty must 
be paid. St. John Chrysostom applies the words of St. Paul on heaven 
to describe hell: "jSTeither eye hath seen nor ear heard, nor hath it 
entered the heart of man to conceive what God has prepared for them 
that love Him not " (1 Cor. ii. 9). Christ calls hell an " unquenchable 
fire" (Mark ix. 44), because the sensation of burning is the greatest 
pain which man can conceive on earth. In other places He speaks of 
the " outer darkness " (Matt. xxii. 13) because the damned never see 
God, the source of eternal light. It is the place where there is " weep- 
ing and gnashing of teeth" (Matt. viii. 12), where the"*" worm never 
dies" (Mark ix. 43), and conscience never ceases to reproach the 
damned. Christ also speaks of the lost as "bound hand and foot," 
to show that they have no freedom and are in a place of banishment. 
From the words used by Christ to the damned : " Depart from Me, 
into everlasting fire" (Matt. xxv. 41), we learn that they have a 
double pain; they are banished from the vision of God (pain of loss). 



263 Faith, 

and condemned to suffer torment (pain of sense). The pain of loss 
is tlie greatest of the sufferings of hell. The greater the value of 
what is lost, the greater is the pain of the loss. " The damned have 
lost what is of infinite worth, hence their pain is infinite," says St. 
Alphonsus. How keenly does he suffer who is cut off from the sight 
of the beauty of creation by blindness ; yet how much greater is his 
suffering who is deprived of the sight of the infinite beauty of God 
(St. John Damascene). The possession of God, the highest good, 
is the end of every rational being. This is evident from the way 
in which man in this life strives after the greatest happiness. This 
longing increases after death, for then the things of earth no longer 
distract the mind, nor can they give any more satisfaction. What an 
awful fate if this longing can never throughout eternity be satisfied ! 
In the words of St. Augustine : " It is right that he who rejects God 
should be rejected of God." The sorrow of Esau in the loss of his 
father's blessing is but a type of the sorrow of the damned for the 
loss of the vision of God. The saints have trembled at the mere 
thought of this loss. The damned have no communication with the 
blessed. They may see them as the rich man saw Lazarus: ^'They 
see them not to their joy, but to their sorrow," says St. Vincent 
Ferrer, " they see them as a hungry man may look on a plenteous 
table which he may not touch." Besides this the damned have much 
to suffer from evil spirits; and it is meet that those who sided with 
and subjected themselves to the evil spirits on earth should be of 
their company after death. We are warned in the book of Job and 
in the case of the possessed persons in the Gospel, how cruel the 
devil is when he has a little power. What an awful experience it 
must be for the damned in hell, where the devil has full power ! 
The damned in hell cause one another great suffering; for they hate 
one another. In that region of hatred of God there is no love of 
God. Hence the numbers in hell only increase its torments. More- 
over fire will torture the lost souls. " They shall be sunk in fire like 
fish in the sea," says St. Alphonsus. And we learn from the teaching 
of Christ (Luke xvi. 24) and the holy Fathers that this fire is a real 
fire. Even on earth God punished by fire the sins of Sodom and Go- 
morrha (Gen. xix. 24; 4 Kings i. 14). "If," says Bellarmine, "the 
soul can be united to the body so as to suffer in company with it, so 
can the soul be reached by this avenging fire." Is it so much beyond 
almighty power that God could not call into being all those sensations 
in the soul, which the latter had while in the body ? It is probable also 
that the fire of hell is not like fire as we know it on earth. Our 
fire destroys; that of hell does not consume but rather preserves, as 
salt preserves meat (Mark ix. 48) ; our fire gives light, while in hell 
there is darkness (Matt. xxii. 13). Our fire warms, while the fire of 
hell is accompanied by an insupportable cold, and moreover it is 
much more painful ; " Our fire," says St. Vincent Ferrer, " is cold in 
comparison with that of hell." The soul suffers also from continual 
remorse of conscience. The lost are given up to despair; they recog- 
nize what fools they were to reject God's grace so often, and to prefer 
a passing pleasure to eternal happiness. How unhappy they are in 
losing forever that God Who loved Ihem so much ! And their 
shame is ever present, for their sins are revealed to all, and those 
whom they despised and laughed to scorn on earth are now in honor. 



The Apostles' Creed. 263 

" They will be tortured with envy," says St. Anthony, " for they will 
envy the blessed their glory." Our experience on earth teaches us 
that mental suffering is often greater than bodily pain ; suicides con- 
firm this. After the resurrection the lost will have to suffer also iu 
the body: "They shall come forth to the resurrection of judgment" 
(John V. 29). All their senses will receive punishment; the sight by 
darkness, the hearing by the wailing and cursing of the other lost 
souls (Matt. viii. 12), the taste by hunger (Luke vi. 25) and thirst 
(Luke xvi. 24), the smell by the unbearable stench, and the sense 
of touch by the torture of heat and cold. Other pains may be added ; 
for instance, we read of wicked men whose bodies were devoured by 
worms (Acts xii. 23). 

The tortures of the damned are eternal. 

Satan with his followers is cast into a pool of fire and brimstone, 
where he will be tormented day and night forever (Apoc. xx. 10). 
In hell there is no redemption, for the day of grace is gone (John 
iii. 36). Life in hell is the "everlasting death" or "second death" 
(Apoc. xxi. 8), for a life without joy and full of torture is rather 
death than life. " O Death ! " says Innocent III., " how sweet 
wouldst thou be to those to whom thou wert so bitter ! " Christ 
tells us that the pains of hell are eternal ; He calls the fire of hell an 
everlasting fire (Matt. xxv. 41), the torment of hell eternal (Matt. 
XXV. 46). So too teaches the Church in the Council of Trent. The 
error attributed to Origen (254 a.d.) that the punishment of hell 
came to an end was condemned by the Church (Council of Constan- 
tinople, ii., 553). "Eternal woe is due to him who destroys in him- 
self eternal good," says St. Augustine. Our judges on earth inflict 
lifelong punishment on criminals, and even a sentence of death. 

The torments of the damned are not all alike, but vary ac- 
cording to the sin. 

"The punishments in hell are not all alike" (Council of Flor- 
ence). According to St. Thomas they are as various as the sins 
committed on earth; they depend on the nature, number, and 
gravity of the sin. Those who have lived in pleasure shall be pun- 
ished by a corresponding amount of suffering and torment (Apoc. 
xviii. T). The inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrha will have a 
lighter judgment than that city which rejected the apostles (Matt. x. 
15). 

2. The souls of those who die in mortal sin go to hell. 

By grave sin a man cuts himself off from God; and in that state 
is like a branch broken off from Christ the vine, which withers and 
is cast into the fire (John xv. 6). The souls of those who die in mor- 
tal sin go at once into hell (Council of Lyons, ii.). In particular 
the following go to hell: the enemies of Christ (Ps. cix. 1), all those 
who refuse to believe in the Gospel (John iii. 18), the impure, 
thieves, covetous, railers (1 Cor. vi. 10), all who have neglected the 
talents given to them by God (Matt. xxv. 30) ; many who were among 
the first on earth (Matt. xix. 30). Those, too, who die with only 
original sin on their souls (unbaptized children) go to hell; (i.e., are 
excluded from the vision of God), but are not visited with the suffer- 



264 Faith. 

ings of those who have committed actual sin (Council of Lyons, ii.). 
A single mortal sin, done however secretly, is enough to send a man 
to eternal perdition. 

Sinners begin their hell even on earth. 

The wicked are like the raging sea which can never rest (Is. Ivii. 
20). Every sinner sits in "darkness and in the shadow of death" 
(Liike i. 79). To him the lessons of religion are folly (1 Cor. ii. 14). 
It is in the hour of death that the worldling will awake to his misery ; 
at present he feels it not, because he is distracted by a thousand 
things. Think often about hell; the thought will keep us from sin. 
" Often go down to hell during thy lifetime, that thou mayst not 
have to go after death" (St. Bernard). "He who despises hell or 
forgets it," says St. John Chrysostom, " will not escape it." 

5. PURGATORY, 

1. Purgatory is a place where the souls of those must suffer 
for a time, who, though dying without grave sin on their souls. 
have not done complete penance for their offences against God. 

Judas Machabeus was convinced that the souls of those who had 
died in battle with idols on them had to be punished, and for that 
reason ordered sacrifices to be offered for them in Jerusalem (2 Mach. 
xii. 43). " The stains which the soul has received during its sojourn 
in the body must be removed by the purging fire," says St. Gregory of 
N'yssa; and St. Gregory Nazianzen tells us that in the future life 
there is a baptism of fire, a hard and weary baptism, to destroy what is 
earthly in man. As to the situation of purgatory, most of the saints 
seem to think it is beneath the earth ; hence the prayer of the Church : 
A porta inferi, etc. (" From the gates of hell deliver him, O Lord ! ") 
and the De Profundis (" Out of the depths I have cried to Thee, O 
Lord"). Some also believe that many souls, for a time at least, suffer 
their purgatory in those places on earth where their sins were com- 
mitted, and that they are often present at the prayers which are 
offered for them. It is certain also that the holy souls have appeared 
to many saints, e.g., to St. Teresa, St. Bridget, St. Philip Neri. As 
to the state of the holy souls, the saints are of opinion that they 
suffer in all resignation to God's will. St. Catherine of Genoa tells 
us that God fills them with His love, so that their greatest pains be« 
come tolerable. Moreover the knowledge that they wiU finally attain 
the vision of God and that they are secure of their eternal salvation, 
gives them great consolation. "Besides," as St. Frances of Rome 
tells us, " they are comforted by the prayers of the faithful on ejiirth, 
and the blessed in heaven, and by the visits of holy angels." " The 
consciousness that they are making atonement to God and suffering 
for Him makes them courageous as martyrs" (St. Catherine of 
Genoa). 

The holy souls suffer in purgatory to expiate either their 
venial sins, or those mortal sins, which, though absolved, have 
not been completely atoned for. 



TJie Apostles' Creed, 265 

Venial sins are visited with temporal punishment, as in the case 
of Zachaiy who doubted the angel, or Moses. Mortal sins also, 
though repented of and put away, are often visited with temporal 
punishment, as in the case of Adam and David. The Council of Trent 
(6, 30), teaches that whoever does not satisfy completely for his sins 
on earth, must do so in purgatory. So on earth a man may be pun- 
ished by a fine ; if he does not pay it he must go to prison. Hence we 
should not be satisfied with the penance given us by our confessor; 
we should add something of our own. Much may be done by patient 
enduring of sickness or willing acceptance of death. Not even the 
least sins should be neglected ; they must all be atoned for. 

The sufferings in purgatory include exclusion from the 
vision of God and other great pains. 

Hence the prayer : " Grant rest to the souls of the faithful de- 
parted, and let perpetual light shine upon them." When we burn 
candles by the coffins or on the graves of the dead, we x)ray that the 
poor souls may be admitted to the sight of God. Apart from the 
duration, there is no distinction between the torments of hell and 
those of purgatory (St. Thomas). "The same fire," says St. 
Augustine, " burns the lost and the saved." Hence we see why 
the Church, in the Kequiem Mass, prays God to deliver the souls 
from the pains of hell (Benedict XIV.). St. Augustine tells us that 
the pains of purgatory are greater than the sufferings of all the 
martyrs ; and St. Thomas teaches that the least pain in purgatory is 
greater than the greatest on earth. " All the tortures that one can 
conceive of in this world are," says St. CjTil of Alexandria, " refresh- 
ing, compared with the least pain of purgatory." 

The greatness and duration of the sufferings in purgatory 
vary according to the gravity of the sins. 

St. Augustine tells us that those are longer in the purging fire 
who have been more attached to the goods of this world; that those 
who have grown old in sin take longer to pass through the cleansing 
stream. The foundation Masses going on for centuries, lead us to 
suppose that some souls have to suffer through many generations of 
men; were this impossible the Church would have abolished such 
Masses. Catherine Emmerich, in her revelations, says that Our Lord 
descends into purgatory every Good Friday, and frees one or more 
souls of those who had been witnesses of His Passion. Even where 
the punishment has lasted only an hour, we are told by St. Bridget, 
that it appears intolerably long. Those who wear the scapular are 
assured of a considerable shortening of their sufferings. Several 
saints hold the view that some sonls suffer no pain but are merely 
excluded from the vision of God. According to St. Mathilda the suf- 
ferings in purgatory are in intimate relation to the past sins. St. 
Bridget saw souls suffering most in those things in which they had 
sinned most; and St. Margaret of Cortona saw some who could not 
be released till the evil done by them on earth had been made good. 

2. That there is a purgatory we learn from the teaching of 
Christ, and especially from the practice and doctrine of the 
Church. 



366 Faith. 

Moreover, it is a remarkable fact that nearly all tlie nations 
of the earth believe in a purging fire. In addition we know 
from sound reason that there must be a purgatory. 

Christ's words are : " He that shall speak against the Holy Ghost, 
it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world nor in the world 
to come" (Matt. xii. 32); He compares purgatory to a prison: 
"Amen, I say to thee, thou shalt not go out from thence till thou 
repay the last farthing" (Matt. v. 26). And St. Paul adds that 
many shall be saved, yet so as by fire (1 Cor. iii. 15). The practice 
of the Church in the following points reminds us of purgatory: the 
prayer for the dead said in every Mass (the Memento after the 
Consecration) ; the Masses for the dead, in particular those on All 
Souls' Day, on the day of death and burial, and on anniversaries; 
the passing-bell (which calls upon us to pray for the departed), and 
the solemnities on All Souls' Day, which were first introduced in 
998 by the abbot Odilo of Cluny, and later extended by the Popes to 
the universal Church. St. John Chrysostom reminds us that 
" the practices of Christians are not meant for mere show, but 
that they are ordained by the Holy Spirit." The bishops of the 
Church at Florence (1439), and Trent (1445-1463) expressly defined 
that there is a purgatory. The idea of purgatory is common among 
the nations. The Egyptians believed in the transmigration of souls 
into animals. Among the Greeks we have the story of Prometheus, 
condemned to be bound to a rock and his liver gnawed by a 
vulture, because he stole fire from heaven. The Jews had the same 
belief, for they offered sacrifice for the dead, as we saw in the case 
of Judas Machabeus. The early Christians were accustomed to pray 
for the dead during the holy sacrifice. St. Augustine relates that 
his mother St. Monica, on her death-bed, said to him and his brother : 
" Bury me where you will ; only, I pray you, think of me always at 
God's altar." St. John Chrysostom declares that the Christians from 
the very beginning prayed during Mass for the dead by order of the 
apostles. St. Cyril of Jerusalem writes : " It is of great service to 
pray for the dead when the holy sacrifice is being offered." Hence 
the oldest Mass-books contain prayers for the dead. Peason also 
teaches that there must be a purgatory. We know, for instance, 
that nothing defiled can enter heaven (Apoc. xxi. 27) ; yet there is 
many a man not so wicked as to be lost forever ; and if he can enter 
neither heaven nor hell there must be a third place where he can be 
purified. 

3. The faithful on earth can help the holy souls in purgatory 
by good works; in particular by prayer, fasting, alms-deeds, by 
offering or being present at Mass, by receiving the sacraments 
and gaining indulgences. 

The holy souls cannot help themselves, since they can no longer 
do good works to satisfy for their sins. After death "the night 
cometh when no man can work" (John ix. 4). Hence they must pay 
off their debt by enduring the pains which God has laid upon them. 
Yet we on earth can help to diminish their pains by Masses, by 
prayer and almsgiving, and other works of piety (Council of Lyons, 
ii., 1274) ; the holy sacrifice is of all things the most helnful to 



The Apostles' Creed, 267 

them (Council of Trent, 25), and according to St. Bonaventure the 
offering of holy communion is of very great assistance. " ISTot by 
weeping," says St. John Chrysostom, " but by prayer and almsgiving 
are the dead relieved." No pompous funeral nor profusion of wreaths 
are of any avail without good works ; it is far more to the purpose to 
give to the poor the money which is spent on idle show. As to the 
prayers, God does not regard so much their length as their fervor. 
Christ once said to St. Gertrude: "A single word from the heart 
has far more power to free a soul than the recital of many prayers 
and psalms without devotion ; the hands are cleaned better by a little 
water and much rubbing than by merely pouring a large quantity 
of water over them." We are not to conclude from this that in or- 
dinary cases a short prayer, an Our Father, for instance, will at once 
set free a soul. " For," says Maldonatus, " God would be very cruel 
if He kept a soul, for which He had shed His own blood, in such ter- 
rible suffering for the sake of an Our Father which had been omitted." 
The Church uses holy water in the burial service because it has great 
efficacy for the holy souls. But the greatest help which we can give 
is the Heroic Act, that is, the resignation in their behalf of all the 
satisfaction made to God by our good works. Those who make 
this act gain, every time they approach. the Holy Table, a plenary 
indulgence applicable to the holy souls; and priests, who make the 
Heroic Act, have, every day they say Mass, the personal privilege of 
a privileged altar (Pius IX., Sept. 10, 1852). 

The relatives of the departed are bound to help them. 

To them apply the words of Holy Writ: "Have pity on me, at 
least you my friends, because the hand of the Lord hath touched me " 
(Job xix. 21). God sometimes reveals the unhappy state of the dead 
to their relatives. In the year 202 St. Perpetua saw in a dream her 
young brother imprisoned in a dark place, all covered with dirt, and 
parched with thirst. She began to offer up fervent prayer for him, 
and soon after he appeared again to her but this time beautiful and 
happy (Meh. vi., 413). When St. Elizabeth of Thuringia received 
news of the death of her mother Gertrude, Queen of Hungary, she 
began to pray and scourge herself with disciplines, and soon she had 
the satisfaction of seeing her mother in a vision, and of knowing that 
she was delivered from purgatory. Yet we should not rely too much 
on the good works which our relatives may do for us after death; 
for the proverb comes often only too true : " Out of sight, out of 
mind;" and besides, after all, the works done for us after death can 
avail us only to a limited extent. " One Mass devoutly heard during 
life," says St. Anselm, " is of more value than a great sum left for 
the celebration of a hundred Masses after death." " God," says St. 
Bonaventure, "values more a little voluntary penance done in this 
life than a severe and involuntary satisfaction in the next." 

Prayer for the dead is of great benefit to ourselves, for it is 
a Tvork of mercy. 

It might be objected that by doing too much for the ..oly souls, a 
man neglects himself. But this is not true. Prayer confers a blessing 
on him who is prayed for, and on him who prays. He who has pity 
on the holy souls will find in God a merciful Judge : " Blessed are the 



268 Faith, 

merciful, for they shall obtain mercy " (Matt. v. 7) ; Christ accepts 
every deed of mercy as a favor done to Himself (Cf. Matt, xx^^ 40) ; 
the departed also display their gratitude when they get to heaven. 
Says Marie Lataste : " Thou canst do nothing more acceptable to God 
or profitable to thyself than to pray for the holy souls ; for they will 
be mindful of your favors in heaven, and will pray unceasingly for 
you . . . that you may become holier in life and be freed from pur- 
gatory soon after death." " It is a holy and wholesome thought to 
pray for the dead, that they may be loosed from sins " (2 Mach. xii. 
46). 

6. THE RE8UBRECTI0N OF THE BODY, 

The Jews had some sort of belief that the bodies of the dead 
would rise again. Job consoled himself in the midst of his suffer- 
ings by the thought of the resurrection (Job xix. 25) ; so too the 
brothers Machabees (2 Mach. vii. 11); and Martha said to Jesus: 
"I know that my brother will rise again in the resurrection at the 
Last Day" (John xi. 24). 

Christ on the Last Day will raise the bodies of all men from 
the dead, and unite them to the soul forever. 

1. He often declared that He would raise the bodies of all 
men from the grave, and proved His power by miracles; this 
resurrection will be heralded by many signs in nature. 

We proclaim in the Apostles' Creed that Christ will come to judge 
the living and the dead ; that is. He will call to life the bodies of those 
who are already dead, while for those who survive till that day such 
a change will take place in their bodies that in a moment they will die 
and awake again to a new life (1 Thess. iv. 16) ; those will arise who 
are in the grace of God as well as those who are in mortal sin (John 
V. 28 ; Matt. xxv. 31) ; and this resurrection will take place in a mo- 
ment (1 Cor. XV. 52). Christ announced that He would raise the 
dead to life again : " The hour cometh wherein all that are in the 
graves shall hear the voice of the Son of God. And they that have 
done good things shall come forth unto the resurrection of life; but 
they that have done evil unto the resurrection of judgment " (John v. 
28, 29) ; on another occasion : " He that eateth My flesh and' drinketh 
My blood hath everlasting life, and I will raise him up in the Last 
Day" (John vi. 55). Our Lord often compared death to sleep, e.g., 
when He said that the daughter of Jairus (Matt. ix. 24) and Lazarus 
(John xi. 11) were sleeping. In face of the fact of the resurrection 
death may well be called a sleep (1 Thess. iv. 13). The following 
miracles were performed by Christ in proof of His power to raise the 
dead ; the raising of the daughter of Jairus in her own house, that of 
the son of the widow of Nairn before the gates of the city, and that of 
J^azarus from the grave itself. We might add His own glorious 
resurrection and that of His Virgin Mother. In very truth Christ 
might say of Himself : " I am the resurrection and the life " (John 
xi. 25). Many natural phenomena show that the idea of the resurrec- 
tion is in harmony with the rest of nature; for instance, our own 
periods of rest and activity, the reawakening of spring after the 



The Apostles' Creed, 269 

winter sleep; the change in many insects of the larva into the pupa, 
and of the pupa again into the butterfly ; the coming forth of the bird 
from the egg, the sprouting of the seed buried in the earth, and so on. 

2. God will awake our bodies to life again to prove His jus- 
tice, and to honor Our Redeemer. 

If the soul only were rewarded, there would be a want of com- 
pleteness ; " for," as Tertullian says, " there are many good works, such 
as fasting, chastity, martyrdom, which can be carried out in their 
perfection only in the body; hence it is right that the latter should 
share in the reward of the soul." God's justice demands that the body 
should take part in the triumph. Again, Tertullian reminds us 
that Our Saviour redeemed mankind body and soul. Had the body 
been unredeemed the devil would have secured a triumph by destroy- 
ing it. Such a thought is unworthy. " By a man came death, and by 
a man the resurrection of the dead " (1 Cor. xv. 21). 

3. As to the state of our bodies after the resurrection, we have 
the following facts: (1). After the resurrection we shall have 
the same bodies as we now have. (2). The bodies of the just 
will be glorious and those of the wicked hideous. (3). All the 
risen bodies will be without defect and immortal. 

We shall have the same bodies after the resurrection: "For this 
corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on 
immortality" (1 Cor. xv. 53). This we learn also from the Atha- 
nasian Creed. Even Job knew it to be true: " I shall be clothed again 
with my skin, and in my flesh I shall see my God " (Job xix. 26) ; 
and one of the Machabean brothers, in the midst of his toraients, 
addressed the tyrant thus as his limbs were being torn away : " These 
I have from heaven but for the laws of God I now despise them; be- 
cause I hope to receive them again from Him" (2 Mach. vii. 11). 
While St. Perpetua and her fellow martyrs were being exposed to the 
vulgar gaze of the heathens, she addressed them thus : " Look well 
and mark now our faces, that you may know them again in the Day 
of Judgment ; " and her words converted many of the bystanders. 
For this reason we rise in our bodies " that every one may receive the 
proper things of the body, according as he hath done whether it be 
good or evil" (2 Cor. v. 10). It is not beyond God's power to rejoin 
the scattered elements of our bodies; if He could make that which 
had no existence. He can replace that which already has had an exist- 
ence. St. Thomas teaches us that just as our bodies remain the same 
bodies over periods of ten or twenty years, in which time the com- 
ponent elements have been renewed again and again, so the bodies of 
the risen will be the same, even supposing they are not composed of 
the same identical elements as before. It is the thought of the resur- 
rection that makes Christians careful in the burial of the dead, and in 
their veneration of the relics of the saints. Our risen bodies will not 
be all alike. " We shall all rise again ; but we shall not all be 
changed" (1 Cor. xv. 51). The bodies of the just will resemble the 
glorified body of Christ (Phil. iii. 21), and will have the following 
properties: they will be impassible (Apoc. xxi. 4), shining like the 
sun (Matt. xiii. 43), swift as thought, and capable of penetrating 



270 Faith. 

matter. The word spiritual is sometimes used to describe the 
risen body, because the latter will be quite subject to the spirit and 
freed from earthly concupiscence (Luke xx. 35). The beauty of the 
body will be in proportion to that of the soul (Rom. viii. 11 ; 1 Cor. xv. 
41). The most wretched cripple, if he has lived a good life, will have 
a beautiful body; while one who has had every personal charm and 
lived a bad life, will rise again to be an object of aversion. The 
bodies of sinners will have to suffer, and will be bound hand and foot 
(Matt. xxii. 13). The risen bodies will be without any defect. The 
martyrs will recover their limbs, and their wounds, visible like 
Christ's, will be glorious and resplendent. The risen bodies will also 
have no trace of old age, sickness, or mutilation. The wicked will 
have their bodies also complete, but for punishment; for the more 
perfect the body is the more it can suffer. All the bodies of the risen 
will be immortal (1 Cor. xv. 42). Just as in paradise the fruit of the 
tree of life gave immortality to the body, so now the Blessed Sacra- 
ment in communion, for it is a pledge of the resurrection and of im- 
mortality (John vi. 55). The bodies of the danmed are also im- 
mortal, but for their torment. 

4. Belief in the resurrection is a great help to us; it con- 
soles us in our sufferings, and comforts our relatives and friends 
when we come to die. 

Job cheered himself with this reflection (Job xix. 25) ; and it was 
belief in the resurrection which gave the early Christians such cour- 
age and calm in the great persecutions. Christians who believe in 
the resurrection ought not to mourn for their dead like the heathen 
who have no hope (1 Thess. iv. 12). St. Cyprian, Bishop of Carthage 
(258 A.D.), used to caution his flock against such excessive grief, leat 
the heathen should come to think that the Christians had no firm 
belief in the life to come. Hence he considered it unbecoming to 
wear mourning for those who were rejoicing before the throne of 
God. Those only should be mourned for who died in mortal sin. 

7. THE GENERAL JUDGMENT. 

1. Immediately after the resurrection the general judgment 
will take place. 

For Christ has often said that after the resurrection all man- 
kind will be assembled before Him to be judged. 

The return of Christ as Judge was announced to the apostles by 
the angels on the occasion of Our Lord's ascent into heaven (Acts 
i. 11). Christ Himself spoke about the judgment in the following 
terms: (1). The form of a cross is to appear in the heavens announc- 
ing the coming of Christ : and the sight of it will fill the wicked with 
confusion (Matt. xxiv. 30). (2). Christ will come in great power 
and majesty (Matt. xvi. 27; Luke xxi. 27). Hence we cannot con- 
clude that the divine essence will be manifested to all at the judg- 
ment, for this no man could see without being rapt in heavenly joy. 
According to St. Thomas, the lost will have some sort of perception 
of God's maiesty and essence. Possibly they will see it as manifested 



The Apostles' Creed. 271 

through the veil of the sacred humanity of Christ at the Judgment. 
(3). The holy angels will accompany Our Saviour (Matt. xxv. 31). 
They helped to the salvation of mankind and now they will receive 
their meed of honor. (4). All the nations of the earth will be assem- 
bled before Christ seated on His throne (Matt. xxv. 32). (5). He will 
separate the sheep and the goats; the blessed will be placed on His 
right hand, and the lost on His left (Matt. xxv. 33). When the 
prophets speak of the judgment being held in the valley of Josaphat 
(Joel iii. 2), they do not mean that the nations will be gathered into 
that particular valley lying between Jerusalem and Mount Olivet; 
they mean simply that manl^ind will be assembled in the vale of the 
"judgment of God" (Josaphat in Hebrew means the judgment of 
God), i.e., in some place appointed by God for this judgment. We 
speak of the general judgment because angels as well as men will be 
judged (Jude 6), and of the Last Judgment because it will be held 
on the Last Day. 

2. The general judgment will take place in order that God's 
wisdom and justice may be made manifest to all creatures. 
Christ will be Judge in order that the honor of which He was 
robbed may be restored to Him before all creation. 

On this day God will reveal to men with what wisdom He dis- 
posed the career of mankind and of each individual, so that all might 
attain their end and be happy even on earth. It will then be seen 
how various kinds of evil, the sufferings and even the sins of men 
have been turned by God to their advantage. Much which the world 
now esteems foolishness will then be seen to have been wisdom. This 
judgment will also demonstrate God's justice; He will then bring 
forward what could not have been brought forward at the particular 
judgment. The deeds, words, writings, of many men have produced 
their results often only after their death ; what blessings, for instance, 
apostles and missionaries have conferred on whole nations, and what 
harm has been done by heretics, not only to their contemporaries, but 
to those coming after them. Christ will be Judge, this office de- 
manding wisdom in an especial degree, and Christ is the eternal wis- 
dom. Moreover He will be Judge because the honor due to Him 
was refused by so many and by all irreligious and godless men ever 
since. He was condemned as a malefactor by Pilate and, as the Apos- 
tle says, " Christ crucified was to the Jews a stumbling block, and to 
the Gentiles foolishness" (1 Cor. i. 23). Then will His enemies call 
upon the mountains to fall upon them, and the hills to hide them 
(Luke xxiii. 30) ; hence Christ's words : " For neither doth the Father 
judge any man, but hath given all judgment to the Son. That all 
men may honor the Son as they honor the Father" (John v. 22). 
When Christ was on earth He repudiated all judicial power: "I 
judge not any man" (John viii. 15). Christ is Judge at the Last 
Day because He became man : " The Father hath given Him power 
to do judgment because He is the Son of man" (John v. 27). God's 
mercy, too, has ordained that the Judge of mankind should be a man. 
No wonder St. Thomas of Villanova exclaimed in ecstasy, " Happy 
am I to have my Saviour for my Judge." 

3. Christ will conduct the judgment in the following man- 



272 Faith. 

ner: He will reveal all, even the most hidden things, will exact 
an account from all men of the works of mercy they have or 
ought to have performed, and by a final sentence separate forever 
the good from the bad. 

The general judgment is thus a solemn repetition of the partic- 
ular judgment; and it might also be called a repetition of the world's 
history, for each event will be represented to the eyes of the assem- 
bled multitude : " And the books were opened . . . and the dead 
were judged by those things which were written in the books accord- 
ing to their works" (Apoc. xx. 12). The Lord "will bring to light 
the hidden things of darkness " (1 Cor. iv. 5). He " will search Jeru- 
salem with lamps" (Sophon. i. 12). It is to the general judgment 
that these words of Our Lord apply : " There is not anything secret 
that shall not be made manifest, nor hidden that shall not be 
known and come abroad" (Luke viii. 17). When the sun rises the 
snows melt and leave bare all that lies beneath them; so shall it be 
when the Sun of justice mounts the heavens. All sins will be re- 
vealed, and the revelation will be worse than hell to the sinner, 
while to the just there will be glory because they did penance. " The 
white robe of sanctifying grace," as St. Gertrude tells us, " will hide 
the sin, and instead of the stains which were removed by penance 
there will be ornaments of gold." All good works will then be revealed 
(Eccles. xii. 14), and the secrets of men's hearts shall be known 
(1 Cor. iv. 5). The martyrs will receive honor for the contempt 
which they endured, and sinners will exclaim as they look on the 
just : " These are they whom we had some time in derision and for a 
parable of reproach. We fools, esteemed their life madness and their 
end without honor. Behold how they are numbered among the chil- 
dren of God and their lot is among the saints" (Wisd. v. 3-5). 
Works of mercy will be required of every man (Matt. xxv. 34-36) ; 
the Gospel explains to us why the saints and all pious Christiaus are 
80 eager in the performance of works of mercy. When people asked 
St. Elizabeth why she was so zealous in good works, she used to 
answer : " I am preparing for the Day of Judgment." There will be 
no question then of riches or social position, for God is no respecter 
of persons (Eom. ii. 11); on the contrary: "to whomsoever much is 
given, of him much shall be required" (Luke xii. 48). The judg* 
ment will end with the sentence of the Judge, which will divide for- 
ever the good from the bad (Matt. xxv. 46). This separation was 
foreshadowed in the parable of the cockle : " Gather up first the cockle 
and bind it in bundles to bum, but the wheat gather ye into My 
barn" (Matt. xiii. 30). Many friends and relatives will be separated 
forever on that day (Matt. xxiv. 40) ; many who were rich and power- 
ful will be lost, and their dependents, or those who sued as beggars 
to them, will be saved. " Then, too," says St. Augustine, " creation 
will take on a new and glorious form, to correspond to the glorified 
bodies of the elect." " We look for new heavens and a new earth 
according to His promises, in which justice dwelleth " (2 Pet. iii. 
13). The existing universe will be destroyed by fire, and this fire 
will purge those who have yet to do penance for sin; and since there 
will be no purgatory after the Day of Judgment the want of duration 
will be made up by the intensity of the pain; as for the just, they, 



The Apostles' Creed, 373 

like the three children in the furnace, will remain untouched by the 
flames. The thought of the judgment is a wholesome one. St. 
Methodius had a picture executed for the King of the Bulgarians, 
representing the dividing of the good from the bad at the Last Day; 
the king could never expel the image from his mind, and in con- 
sequence became a Christian and promoted Christianity with great 
zeal in his kingdom. In the Acts we read (Acts xxiv. 25) how Felix 
trembled when St. Paul spoke of the judgment to come; yet Felix 
does not seem to have acted up to grace, for he broke off the discourse 
and gave up St. Paul to the Jews. 

2. The Day of Judgment is unknown to us, though certain 
signs have been revealed which are to herald its approach. 

Christ said : " Of that day and hour no one knoweth ; no not the 
angels of heaven, but the Father alone" (Matt. xxiv. 36). The 
knowledge of it would be of as little use as the knowledge of the hour 
of our death. St. Augustine recommends us to do now as we should 
do if to-morrow were to be the Last Day : then we shall have no occa- 
sion to dread the coming of the Judge. Christ gave some signs of 
the approach of the Last Day (Matt. xxiv. 3, etc.), so that Chris- 
tians might remain steadfast and courageous. The signs are : 

1. The Gospel shall be preached to the whole world (Matt, 
xxiv. 14). 

Some two-thirds of the world are still pagans. 

2. The greater part of mankind ^vill be without faith (Luke 
xviii. 8; 2 Thess. ii. 3) and immersed in things of earth (Luke 
xvii. 26, etc.). 

Mankind will be much as they were in the days of ISToe (Matt, 
xxiv. 38). 

3. Antichrist will appear. 

Antichrist is a man who will give himself out to be Christ, and 
by the help of the devil will perform many wonders (2 Thess. ii. 9). 
He will be a terror by the persecution which he will raise (Apoc. xx. 
3-9). It is probable that he v/ill choose for his kingdom Jerusalem 
and those places where Christ lived. Our Lord will kill him on the 
Last Day (2 Thess. ii. 8). Types and forerunners of Antichrist have 
existed from time to time (1 John ii. 18), "for the mystery of iniq- 
uity already worketh " (2 Thess. ii. 7). 

4. Henoch and Elias will return and preach penance. 

" Behold I will send you Elias the prophet before the coming of 
the great and dreadful day of the Lord. And he shall turn the hearts 
of the fathers to the children and the hearts of the children to their 
fathers " (Mai. iv. 5) ; i.e., he will bring round the Jews to the senti- 
ments of their forefathers, the patriarchs; Christ also foretold that 
Elias should come and restore all things (Matt. xvii. 11). Of Henoch 
we know that " Henoch pleased God find was translated into paradise 
that he may give ropentance to the nations" (Ecelus. xliv. 16). 
Henoch and Elias will preach for three years and a half, and recover 



274 Fait>^ 

many souls from Antichrist, who in the end will kill them, and their 
bodies will be left unburied. After three days and a half God will 
raise them to life again (Apoc. xi. 3-11). 

5. The Jews will be converted. 

The conversion of the Jews was foretold by Osee : " The children 
of Israel shall sit many days without king, and without prince, and 
without sacrifice, and without altar, and without ephod, and without 
theraphim. And after this the children of Israel shall return and 
shall seek the Lord their God and David their king; and they shall 
fear the Lord and His goodness in the last days " (Osee iii. 4-5) ; 
blindness was to be the lot of Israel until the fulness of the Gentiles 
should come in (Rom. xi. 25). Elias is to restore the tribes of Jacob 
(Ecclus. xlviii. 10). 

6. Dreadful signs will appear in the heavens and great tribu- 
lations will come upon mankind. 

" The sun shall be darkened and the moon shall not give her light, 
and the stars shall fall from heaven and the powers of the heavens 
shall be moved " (Matt. xxiv. 29) ; war, pestilence, and famine shall 
come as at the time of the siege of Jerusalem (Matt. xxiv. 7, etc.). 
Men shall wither with fear and from expectation of the things that 
will come upon the earth (Luke xxi. 25). 



CHEISTIAN^ HOPE. 

1. THE ES8ENCE OF CHRISTIAN HOPE. 

Christian hope is the confident expectation of all those things 
which Christ promised us with regard to the fulfilment of God's 
will. 

" Hope," says St. Paulinus, " gives us a foretaste of the prom- 
ised joys of paradise." " How great is the multitude of Thy sweet- 
ness, O Lord . . . which Thou hast wrought for them that hope in 
Thee " (Ps. xxx. 20). Such hope may be called holy, because directed 
to God and supernatural things ; by this is fulfilled the precept of the 
Apostle: " Seek the things that are above" (Col. iii. 1). 

1. As the reward of carrying out God's will, Christ has 
promised us eternal happiness, and the means required for attain- 
ing it ; in particular God's grace, temporal goods for the sustaining 
of life, forgiveness of sins, help in our necessities, and the answer- 
ing of our prayers. 

Christ promised us eternal happiness (1 John ii. 25) ; " In the 
house of My Father are many mansions. If not I would have told 
you that I go to prepare a place for you " (John xiv. 2) ; He has fur- 
ther promised to raise our bodies again after death (John v. 28). 
The desire for perfect happiness is planted deep in our nature. 
Christ also promised His grace, i.e., the help of the Holy Spirit, for 
His will is that all men be saved (1 Tim. ii. 4). Grace is absolutely 
necessary for salvation: actual grace for our conversion, sanctifying 
grace for entrance into heaven. Temporal goods are promised : " Be 



Christian Hope, 276 

not solicitous for your life what you shall eat, nor for your body 
what you shall put on. . . . For your Father knoweth that you have 
need of all these things," and we are taught that since the Father 
feeds the birds of the air, and clothes the weeds of the field, much 
more will be His care for us (Matt. vi. 25-32). The experience of 
the saints in this matter is a great consolation and lesson to us; 
over and over again they have been in difficulties for the means of 
subsistence, yet help always came. Forgiveness of sin is assured to us 
if we wish to amend: " There shall be joy in heaven upon one sinner 
that doth penance, more than over ninety-nine just who need not 
penance" (Luke xv. 7). The parable of the prodigal son and of the 
lost sheep reveal to us how readily God will forgive the sinner : " So 
long as we are on the earth it is never too late to repent," says St. 
Cyprian. The penitent thief on the cross found salvation. " God 
wills not the death of the sinner, but that he be converted and live " 
(Ezech. xviii. 32). We are certain of help in our necessities. When 
the apostles were filled with fear at the storm on the lake, Christ's 
reproach to them was : " Why do you fear, O ye of little faith ? " 
(Matt. viii. 26). God is called the "helper in tribulations" (Ps. xlv. 
2). It is true He seems at times to delay answering our prayers, 
as in the marriage-feast at Cana, when He said : " My hour is not yet 
come " (John ii. 4) ; yet the longer we have to wait, the more wonder- 
ful is His answer, and we might reflect on the calming of the storm on 
the lake, on the release of St. Peter from prison, on the fate of 
Aman, the persecutor of the Jews (Esther vii.). " When our necessity 
is greatest," says St. Ambrose, " God's help is nearest." Christ prom- 
ised that our petitions shall always be heard : " If you shall ask Me 
anything in My name, that will I do " (John xiv. 14). " Amen, Amen, 
I say to you; if you ask the Father anything in My name, He will 
give it you" (John xvi. 23). 

Christ taught us in the Our Father to ask our heavenly 
Father for all these things. 

The second petition is a prayer for salvation, the third for grace, 
the fourth for temporal necessities, the fifth for forgiveness of sins, 
the sixth and seventh for help in our needs. 

2. Christian hope is based on faith, for we hope for the fulfil- 
ment of God's promises because we believe that God is infinitely 
true, infinitely powerful, and infinitely good, and that Christ has 
merited all for us. 

" We are firmly convinced," says St. Clement of Eome, " that He 
Who forbade deceit cannot Himself deceive." Hence the words of St. 
Paul : " Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, 
for He is faithful that hath promised" (Heb. x. 23). Moreover, we 
are convinced that God, to Whom nothing is impossible (Luke i. 37), 
is able to carry out His promises (Rom. iv. 18) ; that God, Wlio is 
love itself (1 John iv. 8), is more ready to give than we are to re- 
ceive (St. Jerome) ; that Christ, by His death on the cross, has mer- 
ited for us salvation and all things necessary for its attainment. 
Thus St. Augustine, " I could never hope for pardon or heaven when 
I think of my great sins, but I venture to hope that through the 



S76 Faith, 

merits of Christ I may be saved by means of penance and keeping of 
the commandments." 

3. He only who carries out God's will can hope for the good 
things promised by Christ. 

" Not every one that saith to Me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the 
kingdom of heaven, but he that doth the will of My Father Who is in 
heaven" (Matt. vii. 21). 

Hence the sinner can hope in God only when he really re- 
pents and is willing to reform his life. 

"Hope without virtue is presumption," says St. Bernard. If the 
wicked do penance for their sins and do judgment and justice, God 
will no more remember their sins (Ezech. xviii. 21). Manasses, King 
of Israel, led his people into idolatry and put the prophets to death. 
For this he was given over to his enemies and led in chains to Baby- 
lon. There he repented and promised amendment. God then set 
him free, and gave him back his kingdom, and Manasses destroyed 
the temples of the idols and did much good (2 Paralip. xxxiii.). 

The just man may hope that God will provide for all his 
needs; yet he must exert himself to gain those things which 
he hopes for from God. 

Christ's words are : " Seek first the kingdom of God and His jus- 
tice, and all other things shall be added unto you" (Matt. vi. 33). 
We are God's servants. As St. John of the Cross says: "It is our 
affair to serve the Lord; it is Plis to provide for us." I^o one who 
has been faithful to God's commands has ever been abandoned by 
Him (Ecclus. ii. 12). "We are unjust to God if we do not place 
great confidence in Him," says St. Augustine. " Cast all your care 
upon the Lord, for He hath care of you " (1 Pet. v. 7). We must not, 
however, desist from exerting ourselves; we must use those gifts 
which God has given to us ; for God will give us only what we cannot 
obtain by our own exertions. In the words of St. Charles Borromeo : 
" We must hop© for the best and do our best." " To expect help and 
to do nothing," says St. Francis of Sales, " is to tempt God." We 
ought to employ the natural means at our disposal; St. Paul, for 
example, though he had the gift of healing sickness, recommended 
Timothy to take a little wine for the sake of his health (1 Tim. v. 
23). And all this is true of any kind of necessity: "Help yourself 
and God will help you." 

4. A wholesome fear of falling into sin must always accom- 
pany Christian hope. 

God's will is that we should work out our salvation in fear and 
trembling (Phil. ii. 12). ISTo one has complete assurance that he 
belongs to the number of the elect, or that he will persevere in virtue 
till death (Council of Trent, 6, Can. 15, 16). Many an old and rotten 
ship has reached harbor, while many a great and noble vessel has sunk 
in the sea. Men, illumined of God, like Solomon, have fallen into 
godless ways before their death, and many a grest sinner, like St. 
Augustine or St. Mary Magdalen, has become a very great saint. 



Christian Hope, 277 

•* He that thinketh himself to stand take heed lest he fall " (1 
Cor. X. 12). "We carry our treasure in frail and earthen vessels" 
(2 Cor. iv. 7). " Mistrust of ourselves," says St. Augustine, 
" should help us to hope." Hope and fear are companions ; where they 
reign, the heavenly crown is easily secured (St. John Chrysostom). 
Hope makes us strong and fear makes us prudent. Hope is like the 
breeze to a ship, driving it in to the harbor; fear is like the ballast, 
steadying it and preventing shipwreck. Fear, so far from diminishing 
hope, increases it. " Trust in God and distrust of ourselves," says 
St. Francis of Sales, "are like the two arms of a balance; as one 
rises the other goes down; the more we distrust ourselves, the more 
tve confide in God, and vice versa." 

5. Christian hope is necessary for salvation. 

A man who has no hope will not do good works, nor avoid sin; 
while he who has hope is secure of his salvation, just as a man is 
certain of a plant when he has the seed ; " for we are saved by hope " 
(Rom. viii. 24). "Belief in God's truth. His almighty power, and 
His love for us, is a triple cord," says St. Bernard, " which is let 
down into our prison from heaven; to this we must cling so that it 
may raise us to the vision of His glory." " The house of God (i.e., 
holiness which leads to salvation)," says St. Augustine, "is founded 
on faith, built up on hope, and finished in love." In heaven there is 
no more hope, for we shall then possess all that we hoped for. 

6. Christian hope is a gift of God, and we can attain to this 
hope only by sanctifying grace. 

In this respect we may speak of hope almost in the same words 
in which we spoke of faith. It is the Spirit of God which awakens 
in us a longing for heavenly things, and fills us with confidence in 
God. As sanctifying grace increases, this power of hoping increases ; 
hence the saints hoped most at the approach of death. Hope, like a 
river, becomes wider as it approaches the sea. 

2. THE ADVANTAGE OF CHRISTIAN HOPE, 

1. He who hopes in God enjoys the special protection of God. 

Examples may be seen in the three children in the furnace, in Jo- 
seph in the Eg:vT)tian prison, in our blessed Lady when St. Joseph had 
thoughts of putting her away. Modern history has also its examples, 
as when Vienna was besieged by the Turks in 1683. Two hundred 
and fifty thousand Turks were investing the city, which was defended 
by a garrison of sixteen thousand Christians. Again and again 
were the enemy repulsed, though the ramparts had been undermined 
and blown up. Yet as the case of the Christians became more des- 
perate, so increased their trust in God; and at the last extremity 
there appeared Sobieski's force, an army of some ninety thousand 
men. The battle lasted but a day, and the Turks were put to complete 
rout. God protects those who hope in Him (Dan. xiii. 60). "A 
Christian whose hope is in God may be oppressed, but he cannot be 
overcome," says St. Cyprian. " Such a one," adds S* Francis of 
Sales,^ " is like a general backed by a strong reserve.'' ^ They that 
trust in the Lord shall be as Mount Sion" (Ps. cxxiv. 1). If a man 



278 Faith. 

puts his entire confidence in God, God takes him under His special 
protection, and he may he certain that no harm will come to him 
(St. Vincent of Paul). The greater our confidence in God, the more 
certainly will He protect us and come to our help in all dangers (St. 
Francis of Sales). No one hath hoped in the Lord and been con- 
founded (Ecclus. ii. 11). "We will not have you as the heathens that 
have no hope" (1 Thess. iv. 12). 

2. He who hopes in God can obtain everything from Him; for 
Christ said that such a one might move mountains (Mark xi. 23) . 

St. Gregory Thaumaturgus did literally move a mountain. Such 
was the confidence of Moses when he divided the Ked Sea with his 
staff, and of Elias when he prayed for rain. "Hope is an arrow 
which pierces the Heart of Christ, and opens the founts of His' 
mercy to the soul that hopes in Him." " A man gets just as much as 
he hopes for" (St. John of the Cross). 

3. He who hopes in God is strengthened by God, so that he is 
not afraid of man, and is patient and courageous in suffering, and 
more especially in face of death. 

We have examples in David before Goliath and Leo before Attila. 
St. Martin was once attacked by robbers who threatened his life; 
when they asked why he did not fear, he made reply : " I am a Chris- 
tian and under God's protection. I have no need to fear; on the con- 
trary, it is you who ought to be afraid." The man whose trust is in 
God troubles himself little about the favors of the great or the say- 
ings of his fellow-men; such was St. Paul's attitude (1 Cor. iv. 3). 
He who puts his trust in God will be patient in suffering, for he 
knows " that the sufferings of this time are not worthy to be com- 
pared with the glory to come that shall be revealed in us " (Rom. viii. 
18). Job was patient in the midst of his sufferings because he looked 
fonvard to the resurrection (Job xix. 25). How can he be unhappy 
who looks to the unspeakable reward of heaven? St. Paul calls to us 
amid his sufferings : " I exceedingly abound with joy in all our trib- 
ulations " (2 Cor. vii. 4). "To die is gain . . . having a desire to 
be dissolved and to be with Christ " (Phil. i. 21-23) ; and again, " As 
to the rest, there is laid up for me a crown of justice, which the Lord, 
the just Judge, will render to me in that day " (2 Tim. iv. 8). So joy- 
ful was the death of St. Andrew (62 a.d.), that when he saw the cross 
on which he was to die, he exclaimed : " Hail, blessed cross, sanctified 
by the death of my God; with transports of joy I come to you; how 
long have I sought you, how long have I desired you ! " St. Igna- 
tius (107 A.D.), Bishop of Antioch, rejoiced when he heard his con- 
demnation from the mouth of the Emperor Trajan; and when the 
Christians in Rom© were planning to set him free, he prayed them 
not to deprive him of his martyr's crown : " I fear neither the beasts 
•^or the rending of my limbs, if only I can win Christ ; " and so we 
i/ld innumerable instances in the lives of the saints. Hope is the 
anchor of the soul (Heb. vi. 19). Like the eagle soaring into the 
light of the sun, it rises above the cares and sorrows of earth. 

4. He who hopes in God is impelled to the performance of good 
works and of heroic acts. 



Christian Hope, ^70 

This is the secret of the zeal of missionaries in the land of the 
heathen. The hope of the Christian is something more solid than 
that of the husbandman, or the warrior, or the artist. " He hopes 
for that which Truth itself has promised," says St. Paulinus. Our 
hope is as certain as though it were already an accomplished fact 
(Sto Augustine). 

S. TEE OBJECT OF CHRISTIAN HOPE. 

The Christian may not hope for more or less than what God 
has promised. 

1. The Christian may not rely on his own powers, on his 
fellow-men, nor on earthly things more than upon God ; otherwise 
he is sure to fail, because outside of God nothing is to be relied 
upon. 

The hope of him who relies only on earthly means is not a heavenly 
nor a Christian hope, but merely human hope. St. Peter boasted of 
his strength, and yet he denied his Lord. Goliath trusted in his 
might, and he came to nought. St. Francis Borgia gave all his 
service to his patron, the Empress Isabella ; she died and then he rec- 
ognized the folly of it. It is better to trust in the Lord than to trust 
to men (Ps. cxvii. 8). To build on the favor of men is to raise one's 
house on sand or snow. Those who put their trust in men will perish 
like the priests of Baal on Mount Carmel (3 Kings xviii.). Lie who 
relies on his own strength and not upon God has only himself for 
protector ; God will not protect him because he does not hope in His 
protection (St. Augustine). 

2. The Christian may not despair; i.e., he may not give up 
hoping that God will forgive his sins, or help him in adversity. 

Cain despaired when he said : " My sin is too great to be for- 
given" (Gen. iv. 13). Saul despaired by throwing himself on his 
sword when hard pressed in battle by the iPhilistines (1 Kings xxxi.). 

The Christian may not despair, because God's mercy is in- 
finite, and God's help is nearest when the need is greatest. 

"Before sinning fear God's justice," says St. Gregory the Great; 
" after sinning trust in His mercy." Who would doubt of being able 
to pay off his paltry debts if he were placed before a kingly treasure 
and told to help himself ? Much less should we doubt of God's 
mercy. " As a spark is to the ocean, so is the wickedness of man com- 
pared to the mercy of God," says St. John Chrysostom. The greater 
a sinner is, the dearer is he to God in his repentance, for more glory 
is given to God when the sins that He forgives are very great. 

Despair often ends in suicide and everlasting death. 

Judas is an example of this. Despair is a sin against the Holy 
Ghost, and as such is never forgiven. " Hope," says St. Isidore, 
" opens heaven's gates, while despair closes them." St. Augustine 
says that he who despairs of God's mercy, dishonors God as though 
he did not believe in His existence; and St. Jerome adds that thf» 



FaitK. 

sin of Judas in despairing of God's mercy was greater than his sin 
of betraying Christ. He who sins kills his soul, but he who despairs 
is already in hell. 

3. The Christian must never presume on his trust in God's 
mercy, i.e., he may not continue sinning with the idea that God's 
mercy can never condemn him to hell. 

Confidence in God and fear of God must ever be equally present 
in us. It is wrong that there should be only fear of God without 
trust in Him, for this is despair. It is also wrong that there should 
be no fear at all; if a man thinks his salvation already secure he 
sins by presumption. " Despise not God's mercy," says St. Bernard, 
" if you would escape His justice." Christ says : " Unless you shall do 
penance, you shall all likewise perish" (Luke xiii. 3). 'Eo man may 
safely say to himself, " I can always do penance for this sin," or, " I 
will reform before my death." 

4. The Christian may never tempt God; i.e., he must never 
expose himself rashly to danger in the hope that God will save 
him. 

He only can hope for help who does what God requires of him. 
He who is indifferent to God's will, and acts with thoughtless rash- 
ness, is deserted by God. Hence : " He that loveth danger shall perish 
in it" (Ecclus. iii. 27). The devil urged Our Lord to tempt God by 
throwing Himself from the pinnacle of the Temple (Matt. iv. 6). 
So a man who should refuse to call in a doctor or to take medicines 
in a dangerous sickness, on the plea that God would come to his help, 
would be tempting God. Those who in the first ages of Christianity 
exposed themselves without reasonable cause to martyrdom were 
not accounted martyrs even when they died for the faith. 



Part II. 
A. THE COMMANDMENTS. 



I. WHAT COMMANDJ^IENTS (OR LAWS) HAS GOD 
GIVEN US ? 

As God gave fixed laws to tiie heavenly bodies (Ps. cxlviii. 6), so 
He also gave commandineiits, or laws, unto men. 

God has given us connnandments in order to make us happy 
in time and in eternity. 

God never commands anything except for the greater good of 
those to whom He gives the command. He only imposes laws on 
us out of kindness, that He may have occasion to reward us. A 
heathen sage says : " Without laws the htLtnan race would be no better 
than wild beasts of prey, the stronger devouring and destroying the 
weaker." 

1. God has imprinted the natural law on the heart of every 
man; this forms the fundamental rule of human actions. 

A young child who has done something wrong — lied, perhaps, or 
committed a theft, feels uncomfortable, frightened, or ashamed; 
though it may never have heard of the Ten Commandments, it is con- 
scious that it has done amiss. It is the same with the heathen who 
knows nothing about God's commandments. Hence we may conclude 
that there is a law of nature in every human heart, a law not written 
upon it, but inborn in it; an intuitive knowledge of right and wrong. 
St. Paul declares that the Gentiles do by nature those things that are 
of the law (what the Ten Commandments enjoin), and consequently 
they will be judged by God according to the natural law (Kom. ii. 
14-16). The characters wherein this law is inscribed upon our hearts 
may be obscured but not obliterated; the Roman Catechism tells us 
no man can be unconscious of this law, divinely imprinted upon 
his understanding. ' This natural law tenches us the most important 
rules of morality, e.g., that homage is due to almighty God; that no 
man must wilfuily injure himself; that we must not do to others 
what we would not have others do to us; furthermore from this 
moral code certain inferences directly follow; these are the Ten 
Commandments of God (the observance of the Sabbath excepted). 
Thus the natural law does not consist of a series of truths founded 
on reason, but is a definite expression of the will of God, which it is 

281 



282 The Commandments, 

binding upon us to obey, and of which in individual cases we are 
made acquainted by means of reason. This consciousness of God's 
will is conscience. Hence it is erroneous to say reason is itself the 
law. 

2. In addition to this natural law, God gave to man solemn 
precepts, more especially the Ten Commandments and the two pre- 
cepts of charity. These are known as the revealed law. 

To the revealed law appertain: (1). The pre-Mosaic law, given by 
God to Noe and Abraham; e.g., He forbade the former to eat flesh 
with blood (Gen. ix. 4), upon the latter He imposed the law of cir- 
cumcision (Gen. xvii. 11). (2). The Mosaic law, which was given to 
the Jews through Moses. To this belong : The Decalogue ; the regula- 
tions of divine worship^ the civil law of the Jews. The Ten Com- 
mandments were not annulled by Christ (Matt. v. 17), but fulfilled, 
as the outline of a picture is not effaced, but filled in by the painter. 
The regulations of public worship (relating to the sacrifices, the 
Temple, etc.), were abolished at the death of Christ, because the 
ceremonial observances of the Old Testament were merely typical 
of the Redeemer. The civil law (regulating the social relations of 
the Jews) was exclusively suited to the Hebrew people. (3). The 
Christian law, comprising the two precepts of charity. This chiefly 
requires the practice of works of mercy, and interior spiritual wor- 
ship (John iv. 24), whereas the Jewish law ordained the performance 
of exterior acts and ceremonies. The Mosaic law was written on 
tables of stone, but the commandments of charity are written within 
our hearts by the Holy Spirit (Heb. viii. 10) ; that is to say, the Holy 
Ghost enlightens the understanding that we may perceive them, and 
influences the will that we may follow them. The former laws were 
imperfect (Heb. vii. 19) ; the Christian law is perfect, for obedience 
to it brings man nearer to his ultimate goal, eternal felicity. The 
Old Law was given, on account of its imperfection, through the 
medium of an angel ; the New Law was proclaimed by the Son of God 
Himself. 

The revealed law is nothing more than a repetition, an ex- 
position, and an amplification of the natural law. 

Because the mind of man being darkened by sin, was no longer 
capable of discerning between good and evil, the natural law was ex- 
plained and completed for him by God. Let us thank God for thus 
making His will plain to our understanding. 

3. Finally, God gives us commandments through His represent- 
atives upon earth, through the ecclesiastical and secular authori- 
ties. These laws are called ecclesiastical and civil laws. 

The Church lays her behests upon us in Christ's name : " He that 
heareth you heareth Me; and he that despiseth you, despiseth Me" 
(Luke X. 16). The secular authorities also derive their power from 
God, as St. Paul tells us (Rom. xiii. 1). The ecclesiastical and civil 
laws are distinguished from the divine laws (natural and revealed) 
in that the former govern our exterior actions and words alone, while 
the latter regulate our thoughts and desires as well. 



What Commandments has God given us f 283 

The laws God gives us by His representatives are, however, 
only binding upon us provided they are not at variance with the 
revealed law. 

That is no law which is opposed to the law of God. Wherefore 
if we are commanded to do anything that God forbids, " we ought to 
obey God rather than men " (Acts v. 29). Witness the conduct of the 
three children and of the seven Machabees. 

4. From the knowledge of the law comes conscience ; the con- 
sciousness, that is, whether an act is permitted or prohibited by the 
law. 

Our imderstanding indicates to us, in individual cases in which 
we are called upon to act, how to shape our conduct in conformity 
to the known law. Thus bv our understanding we attain to the 
knowledge of the law and of our duty. This knowledge is called 
conscience. Conscience is therefore a practical act of the intellect; 
it also impels our will powerfully towards what is good. Hence it is 
often called the voice of God within us. 

Conscience makes itself heard in the following manner : Be- 
fore an action it speaks either in encouragement or in w^arning; 
after the action it fills us either with peace or with disquiet, 
according as the action is good or evil. 

Conscience filled Cain and Judas with unrest. Our conscience 
is either good or bad. A good conscience makes us bright and cheer- 
ful, it sweetens the bitterness of life ; it brings rest and contentment. 
A bad conscience makes us morose and ill at ease; it is a worm, en- 
gendered by the corruption of sin, and this worm never dies (Mark ix. 
43). A bad conscience embitters all the joys of life; the man who 
has a bad conscience is like a condemned criminal, who, whatever the 
enjoyments offered him in his last hours, takes no real pleasure in 
anything. 

A man's conscience may be either tender or deadened. 

A tender conscience shrinks from the least sin; a deadened con- 
science scarcely heeds great sins. The conscience of the saints was 
tender; they feared to offend God in the slightest degree; the con- 
science of men of the world is deadened; it glosses over sins that 
are unquestionably mortal. Yet such men will sometimes attach 
groat importance to trifles ; they strain out gnats and swallow camels 
(Matt, xxiii. 24). Thus the Jews who crucified Our Lord would not 
go into the court of Pilate lest they should be defiled (John xviii. 
28). A man who has a tender conscience is called conscientious, 
while one whose conscience is blunted is said to be without con- 
science. 

A man's conscience muy be either lax (unscrupulous) or 
timid (over-scrupulous). 

He whose conscience is lax persuades himself that the greatest 
sins are permissible : once in a way does not count, he will say, to err 



284 Tlie Commandments. 

is human; in consequence of his dissolute life he no longer heeds the 
reproaches of conscience; in fact he scarcely hears them. But an 
over-scrupulous conscience, on the other hand, makes a man see sin 
where there is no sin. Like a timid horse that shies at a tree or a 
stone, thus exposing his rider to the risk of falling, so a scrupulous 
person imagines there is danger where there is none, and is liable to 
fall into disobedience and other sins. Over-scrupulosity does not 
arise from any misapprehension, but from an ill-regulated mind, 
which has the effect of obscuring the reason. St. Francis of Sales 
says that it has its source in pride. The over-scrupulous are timid; 
thus they can never attain a high degree of perfection. They ought 
not to dwell upon their doubts, for these are like glue or pitch. The 
more they are touched, the more they adhere to one. St. Alphonsus 
bids us contemn our scruples, and do that from which they would deter 
us. The scrupulous should mistrust their own judgment and view 
of things ; they must in fact renounce them altogether if they are to 
get rid of their timidity. " He who would do great things for God," 
says St. Ignatius, "must beware of being too cautious; had the 
apostles been so they would never have undertaken the evangelization 
of the world." 

A man commits a sin if he acts against the dictates of his 
conscience. 

Conscience is nothing more than the law, applied to particular 
cases. In acting against our conscience therefore, we disobey the 
law even if we are under a mistake. For instance, if a man eats meat 
on a Thursday, thinking it to be a Friday, he commits a sin. 

5. God's commandments do not deprive men in any way of true 
freedom. 

They rather serve to make him independent of creatures. It is 
the sinner who falls under the yoke of an ignominious servitude. 
"Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty" (2 Cor. iii. 17). 
Besides, liberty does not consist in the right to do whatever we will, 
but whatever is permitted. The word is much abused in the present 
day; many consider it to mean license, and they call the restraint 
which the laws impose on their evil work tyranny and despotism. 
Others think it signifies liberty for themselves and servitude for 
others. Hence we often find so-called liberals the most intolerant of 
mankind. 



IL THE TWO COMMANDMENTS OF CHAEITY. 

1. The most important commandments are the two command- 
ments of charity, that is to say, the love of God and the love of 
one's neighbor, for all the other commandments are comprised in 
them. 

When Christ was once asked by one of the Scribes which was the 
first of all the commandments, He answered : " Thou shalt love the 
Lord thy God with thy whole heart (i.e., with the will) and with 
thy whole soul (i.e., with the understanding) and with thy whole 
mind (i.e., with the affections) and with thy whole strength (i.e., in 



The Two Commandme?its oj- Charity, 285 

all thy actions. This is the first commandment. And the second is 
like unto it : Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself " (Mark xii. 
30, 31). The same precepts were given to the Jews (Deut. vi. 5; Lev. 
xix. 18). These two commandments contain all the others, because 
they influence and direct all the powers of the soul of man; the 
understanding, the affections, the will, and all his actions besides. 
Thus he who fulfils these two commandments of charity keeps all the 
commandments; were they every^vhere observed no other law would 
be necessary in the State or in the family. Hence Christ says : " On 
these two commandments dependeth the whole law and the prophets " 
(Matt. xxii. 40). The other commandments do but inculcate in 
detail what the commandments of charity enjoin. 

In the command to love God the first four of the command- 
ments of God are comprised; the other commandments of God 
and the obligation to perform works of mercy are comprehended 
in the second. 

The first four commandments contain our duty to God. As our 
supreme Ruler He requires of us in the First Commandment worship 
and fidelity; in the Second, respect; in the Third, service; in the 
Fourth, respect towards His representatives upon earth. The other 
six enjoin on us our duty to our neighbor, forbidding us to injure him 
as regards his life in the Fifth ; his purity in the Sixth ; his property 
in the Seventh ; his honor in the Eighth ; his family in the Ninth and 
Tenth. The precept of Our Lord enjoining on us the perfonning of 
works of mercy (Matt. xxv. 31 seq.) is an amplification of the second 
commandment of charity, for it requires us to help our neighbor in 
his need. That the last six commandments of the Decalogue are a 
connected whole we gather from Our Lord's answer to the rich young 
man (Matt. xix. 18). St. Paul also classes them together (Rom. 
xiii. 9). 

2. Without the love of God and of our neighbor no man can 
be saved. 

St. John says : " He that loveth not, abideth in death " (1 John 
iii. 14). St. Augustine says that as we require two feet to walk, so 
we must have the love of God and of our neighbor if we would reach 
heaven, and enter into the presence of God. As the bird cannot fly 
without two wings, so must we be bonie aloft upon these two pinions 
if we would soar up to heaven. The blessed in heaven love God and 
one another; we must do the same here on earth if we are to join 
their blissful company. "What is man, O God," asks St. Augus- 
tine, " that Thou dost command him to love Thee, and threaten him 
with terrible chastisements if he fails to do so ? " 

3. The capacity for loving God and our neighbor is bestowed 
upon us simultaneously with sanctifying grace. 

Of ourselves we are incapable of loving God above all things. 
Ever since the blight of original sin fell upon us, it is with our 
heart as with the date-palm, which transplanted to a colder clime does 
indeed bear fruit, but cannot produce the ripe and delicious dates 
of the land where it is indigenous. So our hearts would fain love 



286 2'he Commandments. 

God, but the power is lacking to them; they can only attain to 
true charity when informed by divine grace. " To will is present 
with me, but how to accomplish that which is good I know not" 
(Rom, vii. 18). IN'ot until the Holy Spirit takes possession of us by 
Baptism or penance is the love of God shed abroad in our heart. The 
love of our neighbor is implanted within us at the same time as the 
love of God; they are but one, the only difference is in the object 
towards which they are directed. The love of God and of our neigh- 
bor may be compared to two streams, issuing from one and the self- 
same source. St. Augustine says that Christ gave the Holy Spirit to 
the apostles twice (when He breathed upon them and on the Day of 
Pentecost) because with the Holy Spirit a twofold charity is im- 
parted to us 

4. The love of God is inseparably united to tne lOve of our 
neighbor. 

As the plant is contained within the seed, so the love of our neigh- 
bor is comprised in the love of God. The two precepts are so con- 
stituted that the one cannot be observed without the other. This is 
why Holy Scripture speaks of one commandment of charity. "If 
any man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a liar" (1 
John iv. 20). Our love of our neighbor is therefore the best test of 
our love of God. He who cherishes ill-will towards his fellow-man, 
who hates him, envies him, injures him in any way, or who grudges 
alms to the needy, is destitute of the love of God. The greater our 
love of God, the greater will be our love of our neighbor. 



III. THE PRECEPT OP THE LOVE OF GOD. 

Man is so constituted by nature that he takes delight in what he 
recognizes as good and beautiful. This delight, and the desire to at- 
tain it, is called love. Thus we see love to be an act of the under- 
standing, the affections, and the will. 

1. We ought to love Grod (1), because Christ commands this; 
(2), because He is in Himself essentially the highest beauty and 
sovereign perfection; (3), because He loves us and continually 
bestows benefits upon us. 

Christ commands us to love God, for He says : " Thou shalt love 
the Lord thy God with thy whole heart, with thy whole soul, with thy 
whole mind, and with thy whole strength" (Mark xii. 30). God 
is the most beautiful of all beings, for if earthly beings are so beau- 
tiful, how much greater must be the beauty of God, Who is the 
Creator of all these things ! (Wisd. xiii. 3.) For one cannot give to 
another what one has not got one's self, consequently God must pos- 
sess in Himself all the perfections in their highest degree which we 
admire in His creatures. God has manifested His love towards us 
chiefly in this, that He sent His only-begotten Son to earth for our 
salvation. Christ Himself says : " God so loved the world as to give 
His only-begotten Son" (John iii. 16). He did not send Him to 
live on earth in regal state, but as a lowly servant; not to live and^die 
as an ordinary man, but to live a life of privation and persecution, 



The Precept of the Love of Goa,. 287 

and to die the death of the cross. God gave His well-beloved Son. 
The fewer children parents have, the more fondly do they generally 
love them, and they dote upon an only child. How intense must 
have been the love of God for His only-begotten Son, yet He gave 
Him for our redemption ! " Thou didst deliver up the Son, O Lord," 
exclaims St. Augustine, " to save the servant ! " Thus St. John ad- 
monishes us : " Let us love God, because God first hath loved us " (1 
John iv. 19). Moreover God continually bestows benefits upon us; 
all in which we take pleasure comes from Him. Life, health, our 
daily bread, the clothes we wear, the roof that shelters us, all are His 
gifts. " Every best gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming 
down from the Father of lights" (Jas. i. 17). "What hast thou, O 
man, that thou Hast not received ? " (1 Cor. iv. 17.) The uninter- 
rupted possession of these blessings has unfortunately the effect of 
making us think light of them. It were well for us therefore to 
contemplate the lot of those who are deprived of them, e.g., the blind, 
the sick, the destitute; we should then see how favored we are in 
comparison with these afflicted ones, and our love of God would be- 
come greater. Children love those to whom they owe their being, 
and so in a certain measure do the brute beasts. He, therefore, who 
does not love his Creator is worse than the brutes. The very fact 
that we owe our existence to God lays us under the obligation of 
loving Him above all things. 

2. Our love of God is chiefly manifested by thinking of Him 
constantly, by avoiding whatever might separate ns from Him, by 
laboring to promote His glory, and willingly accepting all that 
comes from His hand. 

It is an error to imagine that the love of God is merely affective, 
a certain delight or joy we experience in God. It is rather an act of 
the understanding and of the will. Man recognizes God to be the 
supreme Good, and esteems Him above all creatures. This esteem 
causes him to strive to attain to the possession of this sovereign Good, 
by avoiding sin and leading a godly life. The love of God shows 
itself more in deeds than in feelings. The love of God is called a 
holy or supernatural love. It is to be distinguished from purely 
natural affection, such as that of a parent for his child, as well as 
from sensual affection, which chiefly regards the body. 

1. He who loves God thinks of Him continually, delights 
in speaking of Him, and of hearing others talk of Him. 

Love consists in striving after something, in order to be united to 
it. Hence it comes that one's thoughts dwell incessantly with the 
object of our affections. "Where thy treasure is, there is thy heart 
also" (Matt. vi. 21). He who truly loves God performs all his 
actions with the good intention of giving Him glory. So the course 
of a ship may be directed towards different points of the compass, 
yet the magnetic needle always points to the North. He who loves 
God utters ejaculatory prayers amid all his occupations, such as these: 
"Jesus, my God, I love Thee above all things"; "All to the greater 
glory of God"; "My God and my all." "The time," says St. Ber- 
nard, " in which we do not think of God, is time lost." He who 
loves God delights in talking of divine things. " Out of the abund 



T%e Comniandfnents, 

ance of the heart the mouth speaketh " (Matt. xii. 34). He also loves 
to hear others speak of God : " He that is of God, heareth the words 
of God" (John viii. 47). 

2. He who loves God avoids sin, and does not allow his 
heart to cling to the possessions and joys of earth. 

He who loves God flies from sin because sin separates him from 
God. Our Lord says : " If any man love Me, he will keep My word " 
(John xiv. 23). He who loves God is afraid of offending Him, rather 
than of His chastisements; for where love is, there is no chastise- 
ment to be dreaded. " Perfect charity casteth out fear " (1 John iv. 
18). One who is inflamed with the love of God lays aside all desire 
for earthly possessions and enjoyments; the love of God and the love 
of the world cannot co-exist in the human heart. 

3. He who loves God rejoices to labor for the glory of God. 

The love of God excites in us the desire that He should be better 
known and loved by men, and thereby glorified. Zeal is the outcome 
of love : " Where there is no zeal there is no love," says St. Augustine. 
One who loves God is grieved, nay, indignant, when God is offended ; 
Moses in his anger threw the stone tables of the law to the ground 
when he saw the people worshipping the golden calf. On the other 
hand those who love God rejoice when He is honored; they spare no 
exertion to bring wanderers back to Him. Consider what hardships 
the apostles and missioners endured in evangelizing heathen lands; 
or what St. Monica did for her erring son, Augustine. The love of 
God is the motive which actuates the angels in their care of us ; and 
which makes us pray : " Hallowed be Thy name." 

4. He who loves God gives God thanks for the benefits He 
confers, and bears willingly the sufferings He lays upon him. 

If we really love God, all that comes from His hand will be wel- 
come, whether it be pleasant or painful. If we receive favors from 
Him, we must do as Noe did when he came out of the Ark (Gen. 
viii. 20) ; as the three young men in the furnace of Babylon (Dan. 
iii. 51 seq.) ; or the leper Our Lord healed (Luke xvii. 16), and not be 
forgetful of our Benefactor, by omitting night prayers, or grace 
before meals. One should be thankful for the smallest gifts, for in- 
gratitude betokens an unfeeling heart. Moreover the sufferings 
God sends should also be cheerfully accepted. Witness Job and St. 
Paul, who abounded with joy in all tribulation (2 Cor. vii. 4). The 
apostles and martyrs met death with gladness ; St. Teresa said : " To 
suffer or to die." The heart that loves God loves the cross also; the 
greater our desire to suffer and be humbled for the sake of God, the 
greater is our love for Him; so say the saints. 

5. He who loves God loves his neighbor also. 

Every one that loves the Creator, loves the creatures that He has 
made. Lie loves his neighbor because he sees Our Lord in his person; 
this Christ Himself tells us (Matt. xxv. 40) . He does not love the just 
only, he loves the sinner as well; for while we hate sin, because it 



The Precept of the Love of God. 289 

is hateful in God's sight, we should love the sinner. We should only 
hate the evil spirits and the reprobate, whom God hates with an eter- 
nal hatred. 

3. We must love God with all our faculties, and above all 
things else in the whole world. 

We must love God with a special, a superexcellent love. Christ 
does not merely command us to love God, but to love Him with all 
our heart and mind and soul and strength. " The true measure of 
our love to God," says St. Francis of Sales, " is to love Him without 
measure." 

We love God with all our strength if we refer all to Him; 
all our thoughts, words, and deeds. 

Our first thought on rising in the morning should be of God, 
and of Him we should think in all we do during the day. All that is 
beautiful in creation should remind us of the glory of the Creator. 
To him who loves God all nature speaks in a voice inaudible to the 
world at largie, but intelligible to his ear. 

We love God more than anything else in the worlds if we 
are ready to give up everything unhesitatingly, if such be His 
will. 

God is, in fact, our final end; creatures are only means to the 
attainment of this end. Hence it is incumbent upon us to sacrifice 
them all in order to possess Him. We must be prepared to give up 
our bodily life, like the three Babylonian youths; we must be pre- 
pared to leave our relatives, as Abraham did ; nay more, a father must 
even sacrifice his only son, as Abraham sacrificed Isaac, if God re- 
quire this of him. God may be compared to the pearl of great price, 
to buy which a man must sell all that he hath (Matt. xiii. 46). God 
tries the just man to see if he loves Him more than this passing 
world; yet He often contents Himself with our good will, and does 
not take from us the beloved object, if we are ready to give it up to 
Him. He who is unduly cast down by afflictions does not love God 
above all; nor he who omits any good work from motives of human 
respect, for he esteems the favor of men more than the favor of 
God. 

One may love creatures, but only for God's sake. 

We may only take pleasure in creatures in so far as they are con- 
ducive to the service of the Most High. The Creator ought to be 
loved in His creatures, not the creatures in themselves. God calls 
Himself a jealous God (Exod. xx. 5), because He cannot tolerate our 
loving anything which interferes with our love for Him. He must 
reign supreme in our hearts, or hold no place in them at all (St. 
Francis of Sales). Because the patriarch Jacob was too fond of his 
youngest son, Joseph, He took him from him for a time, and He did 
the same with Benjamin. So He acts towards us now. Christ says? 
"He that loveth father or mother more than Me, is not worthy of 
Me" (Matt. x. 37). St. Augustine says: "He loves God too little 
who loves an3rthing besides God ; imless indeed he loves it out of 1ot<* 
to God." 



290 7%e Commandments, 

4. The love of God is of great advantage to us: Through it 
we are united to God here on earth, our minds are enlightened, 
our will is strengthened; we obtain pardon of sin, peace of soul, 
manifold proofs of God's favor, and after death celestial joys. 

As avarice is the root of all evil, so the holy love of God is the root 
of all that is g-ood. It is compared to oil, or to fire, for like these it 
rises upward, it gives light and warmth; it softens and purifies. He 
who loves God is the dwelling-place of the Holy Spirit; thus he is 
united to God. Through love God becomes present in our hearts as 
He is in heaven ; for Christ says : " H any man love Me, My Father 
will love him, and we will come to him and make our abode with 
him" (John xiv. 23). Love of God and sanctifying grace cannot be 
dissevered; where one is, there is the other. He who loves God enjoys 
heaven upon earth. " Hence," says St. Francis of Sales, " we should 
not be too anxious to discover whether we are pleasing to God, but 
rather whether God is pleasing to us." The man who loves God ob- 
tains through the indwelling of the Holy Ghost enlightenment of the 
mind, strengthening of the will, pardon of sin, and true peace of soul. 
Our soul is like a mirror, which reflects the object towards which it 
is turned. K therefore we direct it towards God, the light of His 
divinity will shine into our soul, which will have a clear perception, 
that is, of divine things. " In the love of God is honorable wisdom " 
(Ecclus. i. 14). St. Francis of Sales calls love the compendium of 
theology; by it many unlearned men, monks and hermits, have at- 
tained proficiency in the divine science. As red-hot iron is easily 
shaped by the hammer of the blacksmith, so the soul which is in- 
flamed by divine love is shaped by the influence of the Holy Spirit. 
ISTothing gives coui'age and strength more than love does. The love of 
her offspring makes the timid hen so brave that she will fly at a man 
in their defence. And what will not a mother endure for the sake of 
her child ? " Charity beareth all things, endureth all things " (1 Cor. 
xiii. 7). What we love to do is no trouble to us, for love makes labor 
light. If then natural affection is so potent, what cannot the love of 
God do ? It enables us to accomplish the greatest undertakings. 
Through the love of God we obtain pardon of sin. Christ said of the 
Magdalen: "Many sins are forgiven her, because she hath loved 
much" (Luke vii. 47). "Charity covereth a multitude of sins" 
(1 Pet. iv. 8). ISTothing- clears a field of thistles and thorns as quickly 
as fire, and no less quickly does a spark of divine charity cleanse the 
heart from all sin. The Holy Ghost Who takes up His dwelling in 
the heart that loves God, brings peace to that heart. He is essentially 
the Comforter. Whosoever loves God feels within him the divine 
presence, and this affords him greater satisfaction than all the pleas- 
ures of the world. Without charity there is no true peace. He who 
loves God enjoys true peace, because his will is in entire conformity 
to the will of God. Charity procures for us many proofs of God's 
favor. Many of the saints received revelations from God. Christ 
says: "He that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father, and I will 
manifest Myself to him " (John xiv. 21). To others Christ Himself 
appeared, or His blessed Mother, or the angels. Of this many in- 
stances occur in both the "Rew and the Old Testament. Or they ob- 
tained speedy answers to prayer, marvellous enlightenment in divine 



The Precept of the Love of God. ' 291 

things, interior consolations such as the world cannot give. To His 
friends, i.e., those who love Him, God communicates His mysteries, 
to increase in them charity and sanctifying grace. Christ says : " I 
have called you friends, because all things whatsoever I have heard 
of My Father I have made known unto you" (John xv. 15). St. 
Paul tells us : "To them that love God all things work together for 
good" (Kom. viii. 28). Even trials and afflictions work for good 
to him who loves God, as was the case with Joseph, Jacob, and Tobias. 
Through the love of God we attain the joys of heaven. St. Paul says: 
"Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the 
heart of man, what things God hath prepared for them that love 
Him" (1 Cor. ii. 9). This is because he is rich in good works who is 
inflamed with divine charity, for love stimulates us to action. Hence 
the Apostle says; " The charity of Christ presses us " (2 Cor. v. 14). 
To behold God, as we shall in heaven, and to love Him is one and the 
same thing. We needs must love the highest when we see it. " He 
who knows by experience," says St. Alphonsus, "how sweet and 
delightful it is to love God, loses all taste for earthly things." 

5. The merit of our good works and the degree of our future 
felicity is in proportion to the magnitude of our love for God. 

" The greater is our love of God," says St. Francis of Sales, " the 
more meritorious are our actions. God does not regard the greatness 
of the work, but the love wherewith it is performed." The two mites 
of the poor widow had more value in the sight of God than the large 
contributions of the rich. St. Paul tells us that all gifts, however 
wonderful, all good works and austerities are utterly worthless with- 
out charity. Good works without the love of God are like lamps 
without oil. As food is tasteless and insipid without a condiment, 
so, if charity is lacking, our works are without savor before God. 
Moreover the measure of our eternal felicity depends upon the degree 
of charity we possess at our death. " He who has loved most shall 
receive the greatest glory," says St. Francis of Sales. An earthly 
father often bequeaths the largest legacy to the child who has shown 
the most affection for him. Even on earth he who loves God best is 
the recipient of the greatest graces. To such a one many sins are for- 
given. When Mary Magdalen fell at Our Lord's feet in Simon's 
house, He said of her : " Many sins are forgiven her, because she hath 
loved much" (Luke vii. 47). A greater love of God brings with it a 
greater knowledge of God : like a fire which, the larger it is, the more 
radiance it emits. If we love God we are rich, richer far than those 
who own unbounded wealth, but who do not love Him ; they are poor 
whoever they may be, or whatever they may possess. 

The love of God may be increased in the soul by meditation 
upon the perfections of God and the benefits He confers on ns; 
by practising detachment from earthly things and by frequently 
making acts of the love of God. 

Just as a fire is kept up and increased in size by heaping on fuel, 
so the love of God within us is fed by meditation on the truths of 
religion. Meditation on Our Lord's Passion is specially calcu- 
lated to increase in us the love of God. Even in the realms of celes- 



292 The Commandments. 

tial glory the Eedeemer's death will form the strongest incentive to 
the blessed spirits to love God. Detachment from earthly things also 
contributes to augment our love. For as a stone gravitates towards 
the centre of the earth as soon as the obstacles in its way are re- 
moved, so our soul mounts upward with accelerated motion to God, 
the centre of our being and its final aim, if we free ourselves from 
the bonds that hold us captive upon earth. It is also useful to make 
frequent acts of the love of God. As in everything practice makes 
perfect, so by awakening within ourselves the love of God, we shall 
attain to a high degree of love. St. Francis of Assisi would repeat 
for whole days and nights the words : " My God and my all ! " It is 
all the more important to make acts of love because the command to 
love God imposes it upon us as an obligation. St. Alphonsus declares 
that he who for a whole month neglects this practice can scarcely be 
exempt from mortal sin. Our love should be without limit or 
measure, as is God Himself. 

The love of God is lost by mortal sin. 

As water extinguishes fire, so the love of God is quenched in our 
hearts by mortal sin. He who has thus lost the love of God has 
turned his mind away from God, and directed it wholly to creatures. 
Except sin, nothing has power to deprive us of the love of God. Thus 
St. Paul exclaims : " I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels 
nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to 
come, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the 
love of God" (Kom. viii. 38). 



IV. THE LOVE OF THE WOELD IS OPPOSED TO THE 
LOVE OF GOD. 

However cruel or depraved a man may be, his heart clings to some 
person or thing, his nature impels him to love some object. If he 
does not love God above all, he needs must love a creature above all. 

1. The love of the world consists in loving, above all, money, 
or the gratification of one's appetite, or earthly honors or any- 
thing else in the world, instead of giving the first place to God. 

The love of creatures is not in itself sinful, only when the creature 
is more loved than the Creator. All who love creatures more than 
God are idolaters, because they give to creatures the honor due to God. 
One loves money, like Judas; another eating and drinking, like 
Dives ; and many others whose god is their belly ; a third sacrifices all 
to ambition, like x\bsalom; others have an inordinate love of amuse- 
ments, gambling and the like. All these resemble the Jews who 
danced round the golden calf at the foot of Mount Sinai. The 
maxim of the man of the world is: "Let us eat and drink, for to- 
morrow we die." The love of the world is worse than high treason; 
it makes a man a traitor to the King of kings. 

2. Through love of the world we incur the loss of sanctifying 
grace, and eternal felicity. 

The lover of the world does not possess sanctifying grace. As 
the dove does not rest upon anything that is unclean or corrupt, so 



TJie Love of the World is Opposed to the Love of God. 293 

the Holy Spirit does not dwell in the soul of the carnally-minded 
and evil (St. Ambrose). The Holy of holies cannot dwell in the soul 
that is stained with sin. " If thy heart be full of vinegar, how can it 
be filled with honey? It must first be emptied, and undergo a toil- 
some process of cleansing," says St. Augustine. He who is destitute 
of the presence of the Holy Spirit, that is, of sanctifying grace (the 
wedding-garment), shall be cast into exterior darkness (Matt. xxii. 
12). Hence Christ threatens the votary of the world with eternal 
damnation : " He that loveth his life (who endeavors to get out of it 
all possible enjoyment) shall lose it" (John xii. 25). Again, "Woe 
to you that are filled, for you shall hunger. Woe to you that now 
laugh, for you shall mourn and weep " (Luke vi. 25). l^o more than 
a ship lying fast at anchor can sail into harbor, can a man who loves 
the world reach the haven of eternal felicity. " Which dost thou pre- 
fer ? " asks St. Augustine, " to love the world and go to perdition, or 
to love Christ and enter into life everlasting ? " He is a fool who 
for the sake of this passing world plays away eternal life. 

3. The love of the world blinds the soul of man, and leads 
him away from God. 

The love of the world blinds the soul of man. When earthly 
things intervene between God and the soul, the soul becomes dark, 
just as does the moon when the earth is between it and the sun. As 
Tobias the elder was blinded by the dung of a swallow, so earthly 
cares destroy the sight of the soul. Hence worldlings cannot compre- 
hend the teaching of the Gospel; it is foolishness to them (1 Cor. ii. 
14). As the sun's rays cannot penetrate muddy water, so the lover of 
the world cannot be enlightened by the Holy Spirit. The earth is 
like a limed twig; the bird that rests upon it cannot soar upwards. 
The cares of this world stifle the word of God in the heart of man, 
as thorns choke the sprouting seed. The votaries of the world resem- 
ble the men in the Gospel who were invited to the heavenly banquet, 
but who did not go because of their wife, their farm, their oxen 
(Luke xiv. 16). 

4. The love of the world destroys interior peace, and makes 
men fear death greatly. 

The worldling is a stranger to interior peace. It has been well 
said: A man must choose between indulgence of the senses and 
tranquillity of soul. The two are not compatible. One might as 
well try to fill a vessel that has holes in it, as to satisfy the heart 
that only strives after the pleasures of time and sense. And since 
the votaries of the world can never attain interior peace, they want a 
constant change of amusement, as one who cannot sleep turns 
restlessly from side to side in the hope of finding rest. Christ alone 
can give us true content. He said to His apostles: "Peace I leave 
with you, My peace I give unto you ; not as the world giveth do I give 
unto you" (John xiv. 27). St. Augustine exclaims: "Our heart has 
no rest until it rest in Thee, O Lord ! " The lover of the world fears 
death so much, because he will be parted from his idol, and because 
death will put an end to the happiness he makes it his object to 
attain. He has, besides, an inward presentiment of what will follow 
after death. On account of this all who love the world are filled 



294 Tlie Commandmeiits, 

with apprehension and even despair in the hour of death. The pris- 
oner fears nothing so much as the summons to appear before the 
judge ; and the sinner, though he is never free from alarm, dreads the 
moment above all when his soul will leave the body and enter the 
presence of her divine Judge (St. John Chiysostom) . The fish that is 
caught on the hook scarcely feels pain until it is drawn out of the 
water ; so those who are entangled in the meshes of the world first feel 
real anguish when their last hour comes. Think, O worldling, if the 
joys which the devil offers you are thus mixed with bitterness, what 
will the torments be which he prepares for you hereafter? 

5. The love of the world gives rise to hatred of God and 
of His servants. 

A man who loves the world cannot possibly have the love of God 
within him. Just as a ring which encircles one finger cannot at the 
same time encircle another, so the human heart cannot love God if 
love binds it to some earthly object. St. John says : " If any man love 
the world, the charity of the Father is not in him" (1 John ii. 15). 
We cannot look with the same eye both at heaven and earth at the 
same time. The lover of the world even goes so far as to hate God 
and divine things. Thus Christ says : " l^o man can serve two mas- 
ters; for either he will hate the one and love the other, or he will 
sustain the one and despise the other" (Matt. vi. 24). What are we 
to conclude if we hear any one rail at priests and at religion? The 
lover of the world is therefore the enemy of God. " If thou wouldst 
not be the enemy of God," says St. Augustine, " be an enemy of the 
world." 

6. The love of the world ceases at death. 

There are many things which thou canst only love for a time ; then 
love comes to an end; for either thou wilt be taken from the object 
of thy affections or it from thee. Hence we should not love that 
which we may lose, or from which we may be parted ; we should only 
love those things that are eternal (St. Augustine). Wherefore let not 
thy heart cleave to earthly things. The true servant of God clings no 
more to his possessions than to his clothes, which he puts on and off 
at will; whereas the indifferent Christian makes them a part of his 
very being, like the skin of an animal (St. Francis of Sales). The 
true Christian should resemble the eagle, which inhabits the heights, 
only descending to earth in search of food. Or he should be like a tree, 
whose roots alone are in the ground, while it spreads its branches 
towards heaven. The soul of man is immortal, and it should only 
strive after what is immortal. " Seek those things that are above " 
(Col. iii. 1). "Therefore choose Him for thy friend," says Thomas 
a Kempis, "Who, when all others forsake thee, will not abandon 
thee." 

N. THE COMMANDMEN-T OF CHAEITY TOWARDS OUR 

NEIGHBOR. 

Every human being is our neighbor, without distinction of 
religion, of race, of age, of sex, or of occupation. 

In the parable of the Good Samaritan Christ teaches us that those 



The Commandment of Charity towards our Neighbor. 295 

who are strangers to us and even our enemies, are to be regarded as 
our neighbor. In the present day some people are so foolish as to 
consider none but their fellow-countrymen as their neighbors. In 
Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, but all are one (Gal. iii. 28). 

1. We ought to love our neighbor because this is Christ's com- 
mand; furthermore because he is a child of God, made after His 
image, and also because we are all descended from the same 
parents and we are all called to attain eternal felicity. 

Christ's precept is this : " Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thy- 
self " (Mark xii. 31). He who loves the father will assuredly love 
his children (1 John v. 1). Now God is our common father, for 
He created us (Matt. ii. 10), we are all His children, and for that 
reason we ought to love one another. Those who are the offspring 
of one and the same parent are blood-relations; consequently since 
we all received our being from the self-same God, we stand in 
the relation of brethren one to another, and on this account ought to 
love one another. A man who loves his father shows respect for his 
portrait. Now, our fellow-man is an image of God; he was made to 
His image (Gen. i. 27) ; consequently we ought to love him. As the 
moon derives its light from the sun, so the love of our neighbor flows 
from the love of God. We are, moreover, all children of Adam, and 
thus members of one great family, and should love one another as 
such. Finally, we are called to the attainment of everlasting felic- 
ity ; we shall all live together, we shall behold the face of God and sing 
His praises together. St. John says in the Apocalypse : " I saw a 
great multitude which no man could number, of all nations and tribes 
and peoples and tongues, standing before the throne and in sight 
of the Lamb" (Apoc. vii. 9). Now we find that on earth persons 
who follow the same calling, such as priests, teachers, etc., always 
hold together. So we, who share the same vocation to heaven with 
our fellow-men, ought to be united to them in the bond of charity. 

2. The love of our neighbor shows itself in desiring the good 
of our neighbor from our heart; in abstaining from injuring him, 
and in doing him good. 

The love of our neighbor does not consist merely in affectionate 
sentiments, in benevolent wishes; these would profit him little. St. 
James says : " If a brother or sister be naked, and want daily food ; 
and one of you say to them : Go in peace, be ye warmed and filled, yet 
give them not these things that are necessary for the body, what 
shall it profit ?" (Jas. ii. 15, 16). The love of our neighbor must 
be practical, it must display itself in doing good. " Let us not love 
in word or in tongue, but in deed and in truth " (1 John iii. 18). 

The desire for our neighbor's good consists in this, that we 
rejoice with him in his prosperity, and grieve with him when 
he is in adversity. 

St. Paul exhorts us to " rejoice with them that rejoice, and weep 
with them that weep" (Rom. xii. 15). Consider how Elizabeth re- 
joiced on hearing that Mary was the Mother of God (Luke i. 42) ; 
how the friends of Zacharias con^atulated him when they witnessed 



396 The Commandments. 

the recovery of his speech at the birth of the Baptist (Liike i. 64). 
Consider how desirous Abraham was to have no strife between him- 
self and Lot, how willingly he gave up to him the best tract of coun- 
try. Consider how Moses desired the good of the Hebrews ; " O that 
all the people might prophesy, and that the Lord would give them 
His spirit ! " (Numb. xi. 29.) The congratulations exchanged on 
birthdays, festivals, and other occasions, the greetings usual in 
society are signs of good will. The Redeemer greeted His apostles 
with the words : " Peace be with you ; " the archangel Gabriel saluted 
Mary. In some Catholic countries the custom still lingers of using 
the words : " Praised be Jesus Christ " as a greeting. Banish mutual 
good will and you take the sun out of the heavens; you make social 
intercourse impossible (St. Gregory the Great). " See," says St. 
Augustine, "how the different members of the body participate in 
.each other's misfortune. If a thorn runs into the foot the eyes look 
for it, the tongue asks about it, the back bends towards it, the hand 
endeavors to extract it. We should conduct ourselves in like man- 
ner towards our neighbor." It is wrong, then, to rejoice when calami- 
ties befall our neighbor and to grieve over his good fortune. Malice 
and envy are the sentiments of the devil and the surest sign that a 
man is lacking in love for his neighbor. 

We ought not to injure our neighbor; either as regards his 
life, his innocence, his property, his honor, or his household. 

All this God has forbidden in the six last commandments of the 
Decalogue. He who violates one of them to any serious extent, shows 
himself to have no love of his neighbor. 

We ought to do good to our neighbor, especially v^hen he is 
in need. 

Christ, our future Judge, requires from us works of mercy, for 
He makes our eternal salvation depend on having performed them 
(Matt. XXV. 35). In a building one stone supports another, other^vise 
the structure would fall to pieces; so in the spiritual building, the 
Church, one member must help and sustain another. Charity is a 
chain that links us to our neighbor, and makes us treat him with 
kindness. 

3. We are commanded to love our neighbor as ourselves, but 
we are by no means obliged to love him better than ourselves. 

Our Lord says : " Whatsoever you would that men should do to 
you, do you also to them" (Matt. vii. 12). Holy Tobias says: " See 
that thou never do to another what thou wouldst hate to have done to 
thee" (Tob. iv. 16). Put yourself in your neighbor's place and you 
will certainly treat him differently. Charity to one's neighbor has 
its limits, however. ISTo one is bound to deprive himself of what is 
necessary, to relieve his neighbor's wants. In such cases to render 
assistance is heroic charity. "Greater love than this no man hath, 
that a man lay down his life for his friend " (John xv. 13). This 
Our Saviour did; and hundreds of missionors continually expose 
themselves to the risk of death to save souls. All the saints have 
incurred personal dangers for the sake of aiding- others. 



Tlie Co7nmandment of Charity towai'ds o%ir Neighbor, 297 

4. All that we do to our neighbor, whether it be good or evil, 
we do to Christ Himself; for He has said: " What you did to one 
of these My least brethren, ye did it to Me " (Matt. xxv. 40). 

To Saul, when he was on the way to Damascus, Our Lord said: 
" Why persecutest thou Me ? " (Acts ix. 4.) Yet we know that it 
was only the Christians that he was persecuting. When St. Martin 
had given half his cloak to a half-naked beggar at the gate of Amiens, 
Christ appeared to him in a dream wearing the half -cloak and accom- 
panied by angels. " Martin," He said, " clothed Me to-day with this 
cloak." Thus God protects our neighbor; we cannot injure him 
without first injuring God. 

5. Eternal happiness will be the unfailing reward of those 
who fulfil closely the precept of charity to their neighbor. 

St. John the Evangelist exhorted the Christians continually with 
the words : " Little children, love one another." When asked why 
he always said the same, he replied : " If you love one another, you 
fulfil the whole law." St. Paul says the same (Rom. xiii. 8; Gal. v. 
14). Our Lord promises eternal life to those who observe that por- 
tion of the Ten Commandments which has reference to one's neigh- 
bor; to those in fact, who perform works of mercy (Matt. xix. 21). 
Why does He do this? Because a man who never injures his neigh- 
bor, or who gives alms, cannot possibly be a bad man. We do not 
find the vicious and irreligious, who do not believe in a future rec- 
ompense, giving alms. He who performs acts of charity possesses 
other virtues besides that of liberality to the poor. Beneficence is 
never unaccompanied by other virtues; it cannot exist without them 
any more than the heart can exist without the other organs of the 
body. Hence St. John Chrysostom says almsgiving may be called the 
mainspring of virtue. 

6. The love of one's neighbor is the distinctive mark of the 
true Christian. 

Our Lord says: "By this shall all men know that you are My 
disciples, if you have love one for another" (John xiii. 35). Christ 
loved us while we were yet unworthy of His love ; and if we love and 
do good to those from whc-m we have never received any benefit, our 
love is like that of Christ, and we are really His disciples, easily to 
be distinguished from the mass of mankind, who usually only love 
their friends and benefactors. Our Lord calls this a new command- 
ment (John xiii. 34), because the precept of charity to one's neigh- 
bor was not understood earlier in the sense He gives to it. Well 
indeed were it for the world if charity prevailed everywhere! No 
laws would be needed, no courts of justice, no punishments. Then no 
man would wrong his neighbor; the very name of murders, brawls, 
rebellion, robbery and the like, would be unknown. There would 
be no destitution, for every one would have the necessaries i life 
(St. John Chrysostom). 



398 The Commandments. 



yi. LACK OF CHARITY TO ONE^S NEIGHBOR. 

1. He who does not desire the good of his neighbor, but is 
envious of him, does not possess the love of his neighbor. 

1. We call a man envious who merely through ill-will is 
vexed at the prosperity of another, or rejoices when misfortune 
overtakes him. 

The envious man cannot bear to see the good fortune of another, 
and consequently he seeks by word and work to do him harm. He 
is like a certain kind of snake, which is said to gnaw away the root 
of trees which bear sweet-smelling blossoms, because it cannot endure 
the perfume; like the moth, that frets away the purple robe, or like 
rust that corrodes iron. The envious man who rejoices at the mis- 
fortune of his neighbor is like the raven that gloats over corrupt and 
stinking carrion. But our vexation or pleasure may arise from the 
love of God or of our neighbor, in which case it is not blameworthy; 
e.g., if a man is grieved because one who is an enemy to the Church 
is raised to a position of influence, or because great prosperity at- 
tends a sinner who will employ his good fortune to sin the more. 
Satan envied our first parents in paradise; Cain envied his brother 
Abel, because his offering was acceptable to God (Gen. iv. 5) ; the sons 
of Jacob were envious of Joseph because he was their father's favor- 
ite (Gen. xxxvii. 8) ; King Saul envied David on account of his hav- 
ing slain the giant and being honored by the people (1 Kings xviii. 8). 
Many a man grudges another a post more lucrative than his own. 
The height of envy is to grudge another the gifts of divine grace, 
and progress in virtue. This is one of the sins against the Holy 
Ghost. The high priests were jealous of Christ when they saw that 
He worked many miracles; they therefore determined to compass 
His death (John xi. 47). The devils feel this kind of envy; they are 
furious when they see the elect advancing towards perfection and at 
once assail them with persecutions. 

2. ~^o sin renders man so much like the devil as envy, for 
envy is peculiarly the devil's sin. 

The envious man is an imitator of the devil, for by the envy of 
the devil death came into the world (Wisd. ii. 24). Just as Christ 
says : " By this shall all men know that you are My disciples if you 
have love one for another" (John xiii. 35), so on the other hand the 
devil can say : " By this shall all men know that you are my followers, 
if you envy one another as I have envied you" (St. Vincent Ferrer). 
The jealous man wishes to see nothing but misery around him. 
There is more malice in this sin than in any other. For all other 
sins and vices there is some pretext which a man may plead in his 
excuse; the excuse for intemperance is hunger; for revenge, the 
wrong one has received ; for theft, extreme poverty, etc., but for envy 
no plea can be alleged. It is worse than open war. There is always 
a cause for war, but none for envy; besides when the war is over all 
animosity is at an end, but with envy it is unending (St. John Chrys- 
ostom) . Moreover envy is the only evil quality which charity cannot 



Lack of Cliarity to One's Neighbor, 299 

overcome. One who is an enemy to you, or enraged against you, may 
be appeased by kindness, but the envious never. Among all sins, 
envy is the only one which affords no gratification to those who in- 
dulge it; the intemperate, the avaricious, the choleric, seem to gain 
something by yielding to their passions, but envy is sterile. It may 
be compared to the moth, which fluttering about the lamp, singes its 
own wings, but does not extinguish the flame or even cause it to burn 
less brightly. 

3. Envy is most hurtful to a man; it robs him of inward 
content and bodily health; it leads to many cruel actions and 
finally to eternal perdition. 

As the worm gnaws away the wood to which it owes its origin, 
BO envy eats out the heart to which it gains admission; it harasses 
the mind, destroys peace of conscience, banishes gladness from the 
soul and fills it with despondency and sadness. When once it is firmly 
rooted within the soul, its presence becomes apparent outwardly; 
the pallid cheek, the hollow eyes, testify to the suffering it occasions. 
Thus we are told that Cain's countenance fell (Gen. iv. 5). When 
envy fixes its malevolent talons in the heart, and tears at a man's 
entrails, his food becomes distasteful to him, his drink no longer 
refreshes him (St. Cyprian). Envy shortens a man's days (Ecclus. 
XXX. 26). The envious man is his own executioner. As rust corrodes 
iron, so envy eats into the soul that harbors it. It brings its own 
pimishment, for it frets away and destroys the individual who cher- 
ishes it. Envy leads to many acts of cruelty. Through envy the 
earth was first stained with a brother's blood, and through envy the 
Jews delivered Christ up to death. Envy causes us to murmur 
against the arrangements of divine providence. The laborers who 
had worked all day long in the vineyard murmured against the 
master of the house through envy, when those who had worked only 
one hour also received a penny (Matt. xx. 11). The envious man 
hates to see the benefits God bestows on others. Envy excludes from 
heaven ; it is a sure pledge of eternal damnation. Through envy the 
angels fell from heaven, and man was driven out of paradise. If we 
are bound even to love our enemies, how great will be our punishment 
if we pursue with our envy those who could never have wronged us ! 
(St. John Chrysostom.) 

4. The best means of overcoming feelings of envy is to do 
all the good we possibly can to our fellow-men. 

In order to thrust the monster of envy out of the heart, no sword, 
no breastplate, no helmet is needed, only the panoply of love. Do all 
the good you can to the person whom you envy ; at least pray for him, 
that his happiness may be increased. Thus you will banish the 
demon from your heart; you will thereby deserve a twofold crown; 
the one for your victory over envy, the other for the charitable deed 
you have performed (St. John Chrysostom). Consider also how short- 
lived is all here below. In a little while we must leave all. It will 
not then matter what have been your possessions, what high offices 
you have filled; your future happiness will entirely depend upon 
your good works. If you will be great hereafter humble yourself 



300 The Commandments-. 

now ; love to be unknown and despised, for he that humbleth himself 
shall be exalted (Luke xiv. 11). 

2. He does not love his neighbor who injures him, whether in 
regard to his life, his innocence, his property, his honor, or his 
household. 

3. Nor does he love his neighbor, who performs no works of 
mercy. 

" If thou dost not give thy neighbor, who is in want, sufficient to 
support life," says St. John Chrysostom, " thou dost not love him." 
To give alms is a strict duty for those who have the means of giving 
them. St. Ambrose severely censures the miserly rich men of his day. 
" The walls of your dwellings are hung with splendid tapestries, while 
you take the clothes off the poor man's back. A beggar at your door 
asks for the most trifling alms; you do not so much as vouchsafe 
him a glance as you pass by, debating within your mind what kind of 
marble will look best for the pavement of your palaces. A starving 
mendicant asks for a crust of bread in vain, while your horses are 
champing their golden bits. How terrible are the judgments, O rich 
man, which you prepare for yourself, who might give assistance to so 
many who are in want. The diamond you wear on your finger would 
alone suffice to feed a multitude." St. John Chrysostom speaks in like 
manner to the wealthy who are hardhearted. " What makes thy miser- 
liness most reprehensible is that neither poverty nor hunger com- 
pels thee to it. Thy wife, thy house, the very dogs beside thy hearth 
glitter with gold, whereas the man made after God's image, redeemed 
by the blood of Christ, is left to perish through thy inhumanity. 
How many streams of fire will be the portion of such a soul ! " 

yil. LOVE OF ONE'S FEIENDS. 

1. "We call those men friends whose principles are the same 
as ours, and who cherish mutual good will, mutually support one 
another, and hold confidential intercourse one with another. 

Those whose principles are the same soon become friends. We 
like what is like. Friends cherish more kindly feelings towards one 
another than they do towards the world at large. They are one heart 
and one soul. St. Jerome compares friendship to a mirror, which pre- 
sents a faithful image of the object before it. H one who stands be- 
fore a mirror laughs, or moves his head, the image in the mirror does 
the same. His very wishes and dislikes seem to be shared by the image 
in the mirror. So it is with friendship. Trifling differences do not dis- 
sever it, they rather clench it more firmly. The smith sprinkles water 
upon the fire to fan the flame, and a town that has been re-con- 
quered is garrisoned more strongly than one which has never been 
lost to the crown. Friends support one another. Pythias and Damon 
were intimate friends. One of them was sentenced to death by 
Dionysius the tyrant. He asked permission to go home to set his 
affairs in order, his friend meanwhile acting as a hostage for him, 
prepared to die in his stead, did he not reappear at the appointed 
time. The hour for the execution struck, but the condemned man 



Love of One's Friends, 301 

was not there. Yet his friend persisted that he would come, and 
so he did. The tyrant admired their mutual devotion and pardoned 
the one under sentence of death. David, the son of an ordinary cit- 
izen of Bethlehem, and Jonathan, the king's son, made each other's 
acquaintance in the camp, and finding in each other kindred souls, 
they formed a close friendship. When Jonathan heard that David's 
life was sought after, he could not eat for anxiety on his behalf, and 
when he had to part from him, he wept bitterly (1 Kings xx. 24; 
xviii. 1). Friends hold confidential intercourse with one another, they 
conceal nothing one from the other. When the door of a room is 
opened, you see all that is in it. So friends disclose to one another 
their inmost soul, and reveal the secrets of their heart. Christ com- 
municated many mysteries to His disciples. I?riends are conse- 
quently candid and open-hearted to one another ; they tell one another 
of their failings. Thus Christ warned His apostles of their faults; 
for instance. He exhorted them to cultivate a more childlike spirit 
(Matt, xviii. 3). St. Gregory the Great used to say: "I only count 
those as my friends who have the generosity to point out my faults to 
me." 

2. Those only are true friends whose friendship is based 
upon principles of religion. 

Friendship, like a building, must rest upon a solid foundation; 
and only when this foundation is the fear of God and the love of 
God, will the structure of friendship stand firm. If it is based on 
wrong or selfish motives, it is founded upon sand. One who is the 
enemy of God cannot be a true friend to his neighbor; he only loves 
his friend aright who loves God in him (St. Augustine). When seen 
in the bed of the ocean, coral appears to be a bush of greenish hue, 
without any special beauty, but when taken out of the water it 
becomes bright, red and hard. So friendship acquires its brilliancy, 
its beauty, its solidity, when it is elevated into the atmosphere of 
divine love (St. Francis of Sales). 

3. Those are false friends whose friendship rests on princi- 
ples that are reprehensible; they ruin one another body and 
soul, and forsake one another in the time of adversity. 

False friendships are those which are formed merely for the sake 
of pleasure or gain, or some bad purpose; or between men who need 
one another's assistance in perpetrating some dark deed. Thus Judas 
made an agreement with the high priests against Our Lord; and 
Pilate and Herod were made friends on the occasion of His condem- 
nation. False friends are only steadfast as long as they need each 
other (Ecclus. vi. 7 seq.). When Judas in desperation took the money 
back to the chief priests with self-accusations, they spoke as if they 
knew nothing about him : " What is that to us ? Look thou to it " 
(Matt, xxvii. 4). False friends act like the swallows; as long as it is 
warm here, they stay happily in this country with us ; but as soon as 
they feel the inclement winter approaching, they take flight to a 
sunnier clime. Or they may be compared to bees, which fly away 
from a flower when they have sucked all the honey out of its cup 
(Segneri). They are like a reed, which breaks when one leans on it. 



302 The Commandments. 

The Romans used to say : " As long as thou art happy thou wilt have 
many friends, but as soon as adversity overtakes thee thou wilt find 
thyseK alone." Misfortune is the test of true friendship. 

4. It is not wrong to have friends, and to love them more 
than other men; for Christ had friends whom He loved with a 
special predilection. 

Our Lord loved all men, but He loved His disciples best; He 
called them His friends, His children, and treated them with famil- 
iarity and confidence. Among His disciples John was His special 
favorite; next to him He loved Peter and James; these three were 
with Him on the most memorable occasions of His life on earth, 
on Thabor and on Olivet. We are told also that Jesus loved Lazarus 
and his two sisters (John xi. 5). We know that God shows special 
predilection for, and confers most graces on those who are most like 
Him, and who love Him most; we therefore are warranted in doing 
the same, in loving and trusting those most in whom we find simi- 
larity of tastes and affection for ourselves. The need of friendship 
is implanted by the Creator in every human breast. 

5. It is a great happiness for us to have true friends, for 
they add greatly to the enjoyment of life, and preserve ns from 
dangers of soul and body. 

Blessed is he that findeth a true friend (Ecclus. xxv. 12). A friend 
makes our life much pleasanter; his sympathy increases our happi- 
ness and makes our afflictions easier to bear. St. Augustine says 
there is no more salutary balm for our wounds than the consolations 
of a friend. Just as a stick is not broken as readily if it is bound up 
with others, so we are not as soon cast down by calamity, if faithful 
friends are at hand to succor us. A true friend is like another guar- 
dian angel; no defence is so efficacious as that which he affords us. 
"Nothing can be compared to a faithful friend; no weight of gold 
and silver is equal to his fidelity. They that fear the Lord shall 
find him" (Ecclus. vi. 15). Alexander the Great, on being asked 
where his treasures were, pointed to his friends and said : " Those are 
my treasures." True friendship does not cease at our death, for 
charity never falleth away (1 Cor. xiii. 8). Those who have been real 
friends on earth will see and love one another in heaven ; Christ 
promises His apostles that they shall be with Him hereafter (John 
xvii. 24). False friends will curse one another after death, for having 
been a cause of sin and unhappiness to one another. 

6. One must not be rash in forming friendships, nor must 
one do wrong to please a friend. 

David complains : " The man in whom I trusted, who eat my 
bread, hath greatly supplanted me" (Ps. xl. 10). Holy Scripture 
also warns us to try a friend before taking him, and not to trust him 
too readily (Ecclus. vi. 7). Do not judge of him as much by his 
words as by his deeds. And if he asks you to do evil for his sake, 
answer him as the Greek answered the friend who wanted him to 
swear falsely in his interest : " I am only thy friend in so far as I do 
not lose the friendship of God." The friendship of God is indeed 
worth more than any human friendship. 



The Commandment to Love our Enemy, 803 



VIII. THE COMMANDMENT TO LOVE OUR ENEMY. 

We call him our enemy who hates us and seeks to do us 
harm. 

Saul, for instance, was an enemy of the Christians. Those alone 
can be said to have the love of their neighbor who love their enemies 
too. A big fire is not extinguished but increased by the wind; so 
the love of one's neighbor, if it be real, is not destroyed, but deepened, 
by affronts and offences on the part of others. If we only love those 
who love us, we cannot look for any great reward (Matt. v. 46). 
We love our friends for our own sake, but we love our enemies for 
God's sake. 

1. We ought to love our enemies because Christ commands it; 
He says: "Love your enemies^ do good to them that hate you; 
pray for them that persecute and calumniate you " (Matt. v. 44) . 

Christ has given us the most striking example of the love of our 
enemies, for on the cross He prayed for His enemies, and in the 
Garden of Olives He healed the servant whose ear Peter had cut 
off. Our heavenly Father Himself sets us an example, for He makes 
His sun to rise upon the good and bad, and raineth upon the just 
and the unjust. He who loves his enemy therefore is like to God; 
he is a true child of his Father in heaven (Matt. v. 45). 

Another reason why we ought to love our enemy is because 
he also is made after (^od's image, and is an instrument in His 
hand. 

Our enemy is made after God's likeness. The king's effigy 
stamped upon the coin, is equally deserving of respect whether the 
coin be of copper or gold ; so we are bound to love and honor the image 
of God, whether the man who bears it be vicious or virtuous. It is 
not the sin we love, but the sinner. Man is God's work, sin is man's 
work ; " therefore," says St. Augustine, " love what God has made, 
not what man has done." We ought also to love our enemy because 
God uses him as His instrument. Evil men, unwittingly to them- 
selves, are instruments in God's hands. As the physician employs the 
leech to draw the bad blood from the veins of the sick man, and effect 
his cure, so God employs our enemies to remove our imperfections 
(St. Gregory the Great). The evil shape the good, as file and hammer 
shape iron : they are to them as the plough to the fallow ground 
(St. John Chrysostom). They are, moreover, of service to us, by ac- 
quainting us with our faults and giving us an opportunity of practis- 
ing virtue. Enemies are like bees; they sting, but they produce 
honey. When calumny assails you, console yourself with the thought 
that it is not the worst fruits that the wasps devour. Finally re- 
member that no enemy can really injure one who loves God ; for God 
makes all hostile designs work good to His own people (Rom. viii. 
28). This is exemplified in Joseph's life. The truth will teach you 
to bear up against persecution. 



304 The Comma7idments, 

2. The love of our enemy is shown in this: That we do not 
revenge ourselves on him, that we return good for evil, that we 
pray for him and forgive him willingly. 

We ought not to revenge ourselves on our enemy. David gives us 
a beautiful example, for lie twice had the opportunity of putting his 
persecutor King Saul, to death, and on neither occasion did he do 
him any harm. Our Lord, when He was reviled, did not revile again 
(1 Pet. ii. 23). Once when Christ was not received in a Samaritan 
village because He was a Jew, the apostles were so desirous of re- 
venge that they wanted to call down fire from heaven. But Our Lord 
rebuked them, saying: "You know not of what spirit you are" 
(Luke ix. 55). Vengeance belongs to God, not to us (Kom. xii. 19). 
We ought to suffer wrong rather than take revenge; we are told, to 
him that striketh thee on the one cheek offer the other (Luke vi. 29). 
Be not overcome by evil, but overcome evil by good (Rom. xii. 21). 
Avenge yourseK, as the saints did, by returning benefits for the evil 
done you ; such vengeance is divine. St. Stephen prayed for his mur- 
derers; he was more grieved for the harm they did to themselves 
than for the injury they did to him. When the Apostle James, 
Bishop of Jerusalem, was thrown from the pinnacle of the Temple, 
he raised himself on his fractured knees to pray for his murderers. 
We should also be ready to forgive our enemies. King David forgave 
Semei, when he threw stones at him and cursed him (2 Kings xvi. 
10). To do good to one's enemy is a proof of great magnanimity. 

3. He who does not revenge himself on his enemy, or who 
even confers benefits upon him, puts his foe to shame and paci- 
fies him, and will be rewarded by God; whereas he who hates 
his enemy and revenges himself on him commits a sin. 

David by sparing Saul on two several occasions mollified and 
touched him to such a degree that he shed tears (1 Kings xxiv. 17). 
Blessed Clement Hofbauer being abused by a woman in the streets 
of Vienna, went up to her, picked up a handkerchief she had dropped, 
and spoke kindly to her. She was covered with confusion, and has- 
tily withdrew. Just as the bore-worm, soft as it is, works its way 
through the hardest wood, so a conciliatory spirit overcomes the bit- 
terest enemy and coarsest calumniator. By conferring benefits on 
your enemy, you will heap coals of fire upon his head (Rom. xii. 
20), that is to say, he can no more resist your kindness than he 
could burning coals. Thus we are taught to be gentle and peaceable. 
He who does not revenge himself will be rewarded by God. David 
bore. Semei's curses patiently, saying, " Perhaps the Lord will look 
upon my afiliction, and may render me good for the cursing of this 
day" (2 Kings xvi. 12). Shortly after he won a signal victory. It is 
difficult to you to pray for your enemy; but the greater your self- 
conquest, the greater will be your recompense (St. Augustine). To 
revenge one's self is a sin; he who does this is like the bee, which re- 
venges itself by stinging, but in doing so, dies. Besides, it is a foolish 
thing to revenge one's self; it is like the dog who bites the stick 
with which he is beaten, for we forget that our enemy is but an 
instrument in God's hand. 



The Love of One's Self. 305 

4. He who forgives his enemy will obtain forgiveness of his 
sins from God; but he who will not forgive his enemy God 
will not forgive. 

To forgive one's enemy is a work of mercy and the greatest of all 
almsgiving (St. Augustine). If we forgive others, we can ask pardon 
for ourselves, as is expressed in the fifth petition of the Lord's 
Prayer. God shows mercy to him who willingly forgives his brother. 
He who does not forgive his brother brings down on himself no bless- 
ing when he repeats the Our Father. Christ says : " If you will not 
forgive men, neither will your heavenly Father forgive you your 
offences " (Matt. vi. 15). Remember the parable of the unmerciful 
servant (Matt, xviii. 23). We are not merely to forgive seven times, 
but seventy times seven times (v. 22). 



IX. THE LOVE OF ONE'S SELF. 

Among all classes of men each one is his own nearest neighbor. 
Consequently every man ought to love himself. 

We ought to love ourselves because God wills it; further- 
more because we are made after God's image, redeemed by the 
blood of Christ, and called to eternal felicity in heaven. 

It is God's will that we should love ourselves, for Our Lord says : 
" Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." In these words He de- 
clares the love of ourselves to be the rule and measure of our love of 
our neighbor. " Learn first to love God," says St. Augustine, " then 
to love thyself ; then thy neighbor as thyself." God has not given us 
a special command to love ourselves, because every man does this in 
virtue of the natural law, and it is contained in the commandment to 
love one's neighbor. We ought besides to love ourselves because we 
are made after God's image. If we are to respect God's image in 
our neighbor, nay more, in our enemy, we must respect it in ourselves. 
Since, then, we love ourselves for the sake of God, it stands to reason 
that the right love of one's self increases in the same proportion as 
we advance in the love of God. We must also remember that we are 
bought with a great price. " You were not redeemed with corruptible 
things as gold or silver, but with the precious blood of Christ" (1 
Pet. i. 18). We also have a high calling, we are destined for eternal 
felicity. St. Gregory the Great thus beautifully expresses it : " Rec- 
ognize thy dignity, Christian ! Thou art made a participator in 
the divine nature, a member of Christ's body ! Remember that thou 
hast been wrested from the powers of darkness, and destined to share 
in the glory of the kingdom of heaven ! " Consider also that the Son 
of God was made man for us and became our Brother, that thus we 
have been made the children of God (1 John iii. 1) ; that the Holy 
Ghost dwells in us (1 Cor. vi. 19) ; that the angels minister to us 
(Ileb. i. 14). These are all motives impelling us to love ourselves. 
Wherefore as the love of one's self is in reality only the love of one's 
neighbor applied to one's self personally, to love one's self is equiv- 
alent to esteeming one's self at one's true value (a matter of reason) 
desiring one's own good (a matter of the affections) — not injuring, 



306 The Gommaniiments, 

but doing good to one's self (in will and in action). This is the 
right self-love, in contradistinction to the false love which manifests 
itself in arrogance, conceit, discourtesy, license, etc. 

The true love of one's self shows itself herein, that we strive 
to attain that which will procure our real happiness; first and 
foremost our eternal felicity, and then such earthly things as are 
conducive to the attainment of eternal felicity. 

The true lover of himself acts according to Christ's admonition: 
" Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His justice, and all these 
things shall be added unto you" (Matt. vi. 33). He will provide for 
his health, his clothing, etc., but without undue solicitude. 

He is wanting in love of himself who only strives after 
earthly possessions and heeds not his eternal happiness ; likewise 
he who despises the things that are helpful to the attainment 
of eternal happiness. 

A great number of mankind regard self, not God, as their final 
end; and earthly riches not as means towards attaining eternal hap- 
piness, but as means for the gratification of the senses. Therefore 
they take delight in earthly things: honors, riches, dignities, etc., 
and are not willing to give them up for God's sake. Such love of one's 
self is a spurious love; it is selfishness, self-seeking. He who prefers 
what is temporal to what is eternal is his own enemy ; for he will only 
enjoy a certain measure of happiness for a short period, then he will 
be unhappy f orevermore. " They that commit sin and iniquity, are 
enemies to their own soul" (Tob. xii. 10). How many resemble the 
miser in the Gospel, who said to himself : " Thou hast much goods 
laid up for many years, take thy rest, eat, drink, make good cheer " ; 
to whom God said : " Thou fool, this night do they require thy soul of 
thee, and whose shall those things be which thou hast provided ? " 
(Luke xii. 19, 20.) " What doth it profit a man if he gain the whole 
world and suffer the loss of his own soul? " (Matt. xvi. 26.) " Learn," 
says St. Augustine, "to love thyself by not loving thyself." On the 
other hand those do wrong who despise those earthly things which 
promote their spiritual good, for by so doing they show contempt for 
their eternal salvation. What must one think of a man who does not 
provide for his own maintenance, who rashly endangers his life or 
even puts an end to it by his own act? 

X. THE TEE" C0MMA¥DME:^TS OF GOD. 

1. The Ten Commandments were given by God to the Jews 
on Mount Sinai. 

The proclamation of the commandments took place on the fiftieth 
day after the exit of the Israelites from Egypt. When giving them, 
God prefaced them with the solemn announcement: "I am the Lord 
thy God, etc." (Exod. xx. 2), acting as a monarch, who places his 
name and titles at the head of the decree he issues, to inspire his sub- 
jects with respect. The Ten Commandments were written by God 
on two tables of stone, to indicate that they were only an amplifica- 



Tlie Ten Commandme^its of God, 307 

tion of the two commandments of charity. They are called the 
commandments of God, because He is their Author; they are also 
known as the Decalogue, i.e., ten words. We must here remark that 
the Catholic Church, acting under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, 
has slightly altered the Decalogue in a Christian sense. The Jewish 
Decalogue, given on Mount Sinai, consists of these precepts: (1). 
The command to worship no God but the true God. (2). The pro- 
hibition against the worship of images. (3). The prohibition against 
taking God's name in vain. (4). The command to keep holy the 
Sabbath. (5). The command to honor one's parents. (6). The pro- 
hibition against murder. (7). Adultery. (8). Theft. (9). False 
witness. (10). Coveting other men's goods (Excd. xx. 1-17). The 
Catholic Church has joined the Second Commandment, forbidding 
the worship of images, to the first, and divided the tenth into two 
separate commands, in order that the Christian wife may be duly 
respected {vide Ninth Commandment). The command to keep holy 
the Sabbath is changed into the precept to sanctify Sundays and holy- 
days. The idea of the Jews that upon each table five laws were in- 
scribed is probably correct, since the first five commandments of the 
Jewish Decalogue contained their duty towards God and His rep- 
resentatives, and the latter five their duty towards their neighbor. 
Moreover, Our Lord, when answering the rich young man, began with 
the precept against murder, and St. Paul classed together the last five 
commands of the Jewish Decalogue (which correspond to the last 
six of the Christian). 

2. We Christians are bound to observe the Ten Commandments 
of God, both because God has imprinted them upon the human 
heart, and because Christ laid them upon us anew in a more full 
and perfect form. 

The Ten Commandments are binding on us who are Christians; 
they were imprinted on the heart of every man. It was only be- 
cause the divine light in man had been obscured by evil ways and 
corrupt manners that the law was given upon Sinai. Thus what 
man would no longer read in his own heart, was inscribed on tables 
of stone. Christ reiterated the Ten Commandments when speaking 
to the rich youth (Matt. xix. 18), and in the sermon on the mount 
He amplified several of them, e.g., the Second, by declaring unnec- 
essary oaths to be sinful; or the Fifth and Eighth, when He 
proscribed hatred and calumny, and even enjoined the love of our 
enemies; the Sixth by condemning the indulgence of evil desires 
(Matt. v.). 

3. The Ten Commandments of God are arranged in order. 

The first three comprise our duty to God as our supreme 
Ruler. 

In the First Commandment He requires from us worship 
and fidelity; in the Second, reverence; in the Third, service. 

The Fourth contains our duty towards those who are God's 
representatives upon earth, and who are at the same time of all 
men our greatest benefactors. 



308 The Commandments, 

The remaining six commandments contain our duties to our- 
selves and to our fellow-men. The Fifth is for the protection of 
life, the Sixth of purity, the Seventh of property, the Eighth 
of honor, the JSTinth and Tenth of the domestic life of one's 
neighbor. 

4. He who keeps all these commandments receives a great re- 
ward from God on earth, and after death he may look forward to 
eternal felicity as his portion. 

God has ordained that what is to us the means of attaining ever- 
lasting happiness should also promote our welfare on earth. God- 
liness has the promise of the life that now is, and of that which is 
to come (1 Tim. iv. 8). He who observes God's commandments ob- 
tains interior content, health, honor, riches, and a more intimate 
knowledge of God. David says to God : " Much peace have they that 
love Thy law, and to them there is no stumbling-block " (Ps. cxviii. 
165). " By Thy commandments I have had understanding " (v. 104). 
He who keeps God's commandments triumphs over sufferings and 
persecutions. His house is built upon a rock, and the force of the 
elements is impotent to overthrow it (Matt. vii. 25). Only by the 
bridge of obedience can we enter into heaven; it is a bridge with 
ten arches (St. Vincent Ferrer). If our reward on earth is but 
trifling, our reward in heaven will be all the greater; it will be a rec- 
ompense surpassing all our hopes and expectations, without limit and 
without end. He fulfils his promise who gives more and better than 
was expected of him (St. Jerome). 

5. Temporal and eternal chastisements await the man who 
grievously violates a single one of these commandments. 

He who trangresses the commandments will have both temporal 
and eternal punishment. The temporal punishments of sin are in 
general, discontent, sickness, the loss of honor or of property, hunger 
and other miseries. He who does not keep God's commandments 
will have no help from God in the time of affliction. Our Lord says 
the house of such a one is built on the sand, and will be destroyed 
(Matt. vii. 27). The lightnings and smoke on Mount Sinai are typi- 
cal of the fire which will be the penalty of those who transgress God's 
law. " Whosoever shall keep the whole law but offend in one point, 
is become guilty of all" (Jas. ii. 10). The reason of this is because 
all the commandments form one whole; they are so closely bound up 
together, that one cannot be maintained without the others. He who 
violates one commandment transgresses the law of charity, on which 
all the commandments depend (St. Augustine). In this they are 
like a stringed instrument; one broken string will ruin the melody. 
Or like the human body; if one member be diseased, it is enough 
to cause death. If the whole city is guarded and one part left un- 
watched the enemy will effect an entrance. The lost in hell kept a 
great many of the commandments ; they are damned because they 
did not keep all. 

6. It is not a difficult matter to keep these commandments 
as long as God helps us with His grace; hence Christ says to 



Tfie Ten Commandments of Ood, 309 

His followers : ^' Mj yoke is easy and Mj burden is light " 
(Matt. xi. 30). 

St. John says to the Christians: "His commandments are not 
heavy" (1 John v. 3). The burden is heavy in itself, out God assists 
us with His grace to bear it if we ask Him. St. Augustine says: 
" When God lays a command upon thee, He requires thee to do all 
thou canst, and in what thou canst not do to implore His help, and 
He will enable thee to do it." " I can do all things in Christ that 
strengtheneth me" (Phil. iv. 13). Moreover the example of the 
saints who went before us serves to encourage us. 

THE FIEST OOMMAISTDMENT OF GOD. 

On Sinai God said : " Thou shalt not have strange gods before 
Me" (Exod. XX. 2-7). That is to say, " Thou shalt worship the true 
God only ; thou shalt worship no false gods." In the First Command- 
ment interior and exterior worship is required of us. To this com- 
mandment Our Lord referred when He said to Satan : " It is written 
the Lord thy God shalt thou adore, and Him only shalt thou serve " 
(Matt. iv. 10). 

In the First Commandment God enjoins upon us to worship 
Him, and forbids idolatry and every false form of worship. 

1. THE ADORATION OR WORSHIP OF GOD. 

We are accustomed to show respect to any one who is superior 
to ourselves in any point, in power, in experience, in knowledge, etc. 
We also reverence kings, aged men, men eminent for learning or 
science, and the like. The greater a man's superiority to ourselves, 
the greater is our esteem, our reverence for him. Now as God is 
infinitely superior to us, we owe Him the utmost respect, worship and 
veneration of which we are capable. This highest worship we call 
adoration. 

We ought to adore God because He is infinitely exalted 
above us, and because we are entirely dependent upon Him as 
our Creator. 

Let us meditate a while upon the infinite sublimity of God. Con- 
sider first His omnipotence; this is displayed in the beauty of the 
star-spangled firmament. " The heavens show forth the glory of 
God" (Ps. xviii. 2). Consider also the eternity of God. "One day 
with the Lord is as a thousand years" (2 Pet. iii. 8). Think of the 
vnsdom of God, the arrangements of Whose providence are so won- 
derful in creation, and Who can turn even what is evil to good. 
*•' O the depth of the riches of the wisdom and of the knowledge of 
God! How incomprehensible are His iudgments!" (Rom. xi, 83.) 
Think of His fatherly care even for the most insignificant of His 
creatures. At the time of Our Lord's birth, He showed grace to poor 
shepherds and heathens; He chose for His Mother a lowly Virgin, 
unlearned fishermen for His apostles, to the poor He had the Gospel 



310 The Commandments, 

preached, etc. " Who is as the Lord our God, Who dwelleth on high, 
and looketh down on the low things?" (Ps. cxii. 5.) How initinite 
is the distance between God and man ! We love God, because we 
know Him; we adore Him because we cannot comprehend Him 
(St. Gregory of JSTazian^en). We are entirely dependent upon God; 
we belong wholly and solely to Him. The members of our body, the 
powers of our soul are His gift; to Him we owe our being, and by 
Him we have been redeemed. Since He has given us all that we 
have, it is just that we should serve Him and worship Him alone. 
The consideration of the divine benefits bestowed upon us teaches 
us to adore Him. We must, moreover, consider that we cannot exist 
without God's continual help. If He deprives us of food, we cannot 
live ; if He takes away our life, we die ; if He takes from us the light 
of the Holy Spirit, we become spiritually blind ; if He were to permit 
the devil to have too much power over us, we should fall into mortal 
sin. What is true of man, is true of all other creatures; they also 
are entirely dependent upon their Creator. " Thou art worthy, O 
Lord our God, to receive glory and honor and power; because Thou 
hast created all things " (Apoc. iv. 11). " Come, let us adore and fall 
down before the Lord that made us. For He is the Lord our God; 
we are the people of His pasture and the sheep of His hand" (Ps. 
xoiv. 7). 

1. The adoration we pay to God consists in this: That we ac- 
knowledge both in our hearts and by our actions that He is Our 
Lord and we are His creatures and His servants. 

To worship God is to acknowledge our own misery and His great- 
ness. He who worships God says with David " My substance is as 
nothing before Thee ! " (Ps. xxxviii. 6.) Our adoration of God 
manifests itself first by interior reverence then by external signs. 
We call those persons pious who worship God in truth. 

2. We worship God interiorly by acts of faith, hope, and 
charity. 

By faith we give our assent to all the utterances of the most high 
and the true God, we adore God as the perfect truth. By hope we 
expect all good things from the almighty and most bountiful God, 
wc adore Him as the source of all good. By charity we occupy our- 
selves exclusively with God, we adore Him as our final end. St. 
Augustine says that the worship of God necessarily commences with 
a correct knowledge of God, for it is impossible to know Him without 
venerating Him. And who that knows the omnipotence of God and 
His beneficence towards manldnd, can do otherwise than place his 
hopes in Him? Who that is conscious of the many benefits God 
lavishes upon him, can fail to love Him? "Is it possible," asks St. 
Thomas of Villanova, " for a creature to know God without loving 
Him ? " Eeverence for God, the worship of God, are inseparable 
from the love of God, for we adore what we love. " Love and adora- 
tion are as closely connected as fire and flame" (St. Francis of 
Sales). Thus the worship of God consists of these three things: faith, 
hope, and charity; by acts of these virtues we are to manifest our 
reverence for Him. Exterior wr r hip is nothing more or less than the 
expression of faith, hope, and charity. 



The Ten Commandments of God. 311 

3. We adore God exteriorly by vocal prayer, sacrifice, genu- 
flections, prostrations, folding of hands, striking the breast, etc. 

Sacrifice is the surrender or destruction of some visible gift of 
God, in order thereby to honor Him as our sovereign Lord. By sac- 
rifice we attest our belief that God is the Author of all being, the 
supreme Lord of all, to Whom accordingly we owe allegiance. The 
oblation of visible objects is a sign of the interior, spiritual sacrifice, 
whereby the soul surrenders herself to God as her final and blissful 
end. By kneeling down or prostrating one's self, as Christ did in the 
Garden of Olives, we acknowledge our own insignificance before 
God; clasping the hands signifies that we are fettered, i.e., helpless; 
striking the heart, like the publican in the Temple, that we are de- 
serving of chastisement. 

1. We ought to pay God exterior worship, because we are 
bound to render Him the homage of our bodies, and because 
it serves to increase our interior devotion ; furthermore, external 
worship answers to a need inherent in our human nature. 

Body and soul are both God's work, consequently both are under 
the obligation of manifesting their subjection to Him. An om- 
niscient God does not indeed need outward signs of reverence, be- 
cause He sees the intention of the worshipper, yet these outward 
tokens are useful to us, because they inflame the interior affections 
and augment the fei-vor of interior worship. And since these 
external ceremonies during prayer are only means to an end (that of 
intensifying interior devotion) they can be dispensed with if they 
prove a hindrance to interior worship. For instance, if one is greatly 
fatigued, one may sit to say one's prayers. Nay more, one may pray 
while walking about or standing, if one finds that thus one can 
pray more devoutly. Do not weary yourself with protracted kneel- 
ing, or it will occasion distraction. It is enough if the posture of the 
soul before God is one of lowly adoration. Man is so constituted 
that he must needs give outward expression to his inward feelings. 
When a house is on fire within, the flames burst out externally; so 
when a man adores God in spirit, he manifests his devotion by out- 
ward signs; otherwise he would belie the impulse of his nature, 
were he to suppress all demonstration of the adoration he pays in 
thought and heart. 

2. We ought never to render external adoration to God 
without having awakened within us the corresponding senti- 
ments of devotion. 

He who kneels down, clasps his hands, strikes his breast, without 
thinking of what he is doing, is little better than a hypocrite. How 
many people go through the usual ceremonies in the house of God 
merely from habit, without thinking of what they are doing ! We 
must not act in this like acqunintances who, meeting casually, re- 
peat a formula of greeting without meaning a word of what they 
sny. The ceremonies we observe when we worship God ought faith- 
fully to express the feelings of our heart. Christ said to the Samar- 
itan woman that God must be adored in spirit and in truth (John iv. 



313 The Commandments, 

24), that is, exterior worship ought to be the expression o£ our spir^ 
itual worship, and correspond faithfully to the feelings of our heart. 
Those individuals who make a greater demonstration of devotion 
than their interior sentiments warrant, are like people who dress 
above their station, and give themselves out for richer than they 
really are. Vicious people sometimes make an outward profession of 
piety, by which they seek to conceal their evil life. In this they re- 
semble those who seek to disguise some unpleasant odor by the use of 
a powerful perfume, or those who having a bad complexion by nature, 
employ cosmetics to give it a fictitious beauty and attractive bril- 
liancy. The ancient Egyptians used to embalm dead bodies to pre- 
serve them from decomposition. So Satan imbues those vs^ho are 
spiritually dead with the aroma of a spurious piety, that their moral 
corruption may not be apparent. Persons who make a pretence of 
piety may be detected by their ostentatious display of devotion and 
their utter lack of charity. They court observation of their religious 
practices, accompany their prayers with extravagant gestures, affect a 
downcast mien, take a prominent part in all Catholic confraternities, 
and count it a crime not to go to confession on particular days. 
Meanwhile they do not scruple to conceal a grievous sin in the tribu- 
nal of penance, they live in enmity, they slander their neighbor, 
give no alms and indulge envy. Thus these would-be saints betray 
their real character as surely as a man betrays his nationality the 
moment he opens his lips. Piety that is simply external does not 
last, because it is not the outcome of interior devotion. " Planets and 
comets," says St. Francis of Sales, " are both luminous, heavenly 
bodies, and closely resemble each other, but the comets soon dis- 
appear, whereas the planets shine on to all time." So it is with real 
and unreal devotion. Those who make a pretence of piety render 
religion contemptible, and deter many right-minded persons from 
devotional practices, for no one likes to be classed with hypocrites. 

3. We ought to avoid all exaggeration in devotion, and never 
omit the duties of our state in life. 

We ought to avoid every kind of exaggeration in the worship of 
God. True piety does not consist in a gloomy demeanor, downcast 
looks, a melancholy manner. True piety is cheerful. The soul that 
rejoices in the possession of God, that is rich in virtue, produces a 
pleasant impression on others. It is also a mistal-:e to load one's self 
with a great variety of religious practices. We should aim at sim- 
plicity in our devotions. A short prayer, rei^eated a hundred times 
over, is often worth more than a hundred different formulas. The 
duties of our station ought never to be neglected for the sake of 
prayer, for nothing is more pleasing to God than their right fulfil- 
ment. " He who performs the duties of his calling," says St. Francis 
of Sales, " with diligent care for the love of God, is truly pious and a 
man after God's heart." That piety which is incompatible with the 
duties of our station is false piety. True piety adapts itself to the 
duties of every state and calling, as a fluid takes the form of the 
vessel into which it is poured. 

4. We must pay supreme worship to God only, for He alone is 
the sovereign Lord of heaven and of earth 



The Ten Commandments of God. 313 

Our Lord said to the devil, when he tempted Him : " It is written, 
the Lord thy God shalt thou adore, and Him only shalt thou serve " 
(Matt. iv. 10). If I am in the presence of a personage of distinction, 
it would be showing contempt for him were I to turn away from him, 
and devote my attention to some one greatly his inferior ; so it would 
not be right to allow any object but God to engross our mind and 
thoughts. It is however no sin to reverence creatures in whom the 
perfections of God are reflected. We do not worship them with 
supreme worship; we only honor and venerate them for God's sake. 
Thus it is permissible to venerate the saints. 



^. IDOLATRY OR TEE WORSHIP OF FALSE GODS. 

Every human creature feels himself to be dependent upon one 
supreme Being, and therefore is conscious of an inward impulse to 
adore that supreme Being. He who does not adore the true God 
will adore a creature. This is idolatry. He who does not worship 
God in the manner which He has revealed and which the Church 
prescribes, will ere long come to worship Him after a debased and 
foolish fashion. This is the false worship of God. 

1. Idolatry is the worship of a creature which is regarded as 
a deity; e.g., the sun, fire, animals, images, etc. 

Idolatry is frequently met with in the history,/t»f the Jews : witness 
the worship of the golden calf (Exod. xxxii.), on 'the adoration of the 
statue ISTabuchodonosor set up (Dan. iii.). Remember the soldiers 
who fought under Judas Machabeus, and who fell in battle because 
they had idols concealed under their coats. Judas had prayers and 
sacrifices offered for the men who were thus punished. In the time of 
persecution some of the early Christians were guilty of idolatry, 
because from fear of the torture awaiting them, they offered incense 
upon the altars of the pagan gods. And at the French revolution 
the people of France fell into the sin of idolatry when a woman, 
personating the Goddess of Reason, was adored in the house of God. 

To this day the heathen worship idols. 

The heathen changed the glory of the Creator into the glory of 
creatures (Rom. i. 23). In Asia, where the heavenly bodies shine 
with greater brilliance than in northern lands, the people looked 
upon the sun, the moon, the circle of stars as gods, and also fire, the 
source of light, the wind and the great waters (Wisd. xiii. 2). The 
Egyptians mostly worshipped animals which were either useful or 
hurtful, such as the cat, the hawk, the crocodile, and especially Apis, 
a black bull with a white scar on its forehead and other peculiar 
marks, which was kept in their temple. The Romans and Greeks 
again worshipped statues and images of the pagan gods. And as the 
heathen had fallen away from the true God, as a punishment He 
permitted them, through the practice of idolatry, to degrade them- 
selves by the most hideous vices (Rom. i. 28). They represented 
their divinities as vicious themselves, and the patrons of vice in 
others; by indulging in the vice of which any particular god 



814 The Commandments. 

was the protector, they thought to do him honor. This worship 
of false gods was nothing less than the service of devils (1 Cor. x. 
20), for the devil was the animating spirit of idolatry; he dwelt in 
the idols and oftentimes spoke through them. David says : " The 
gods of the Gentiles are devils" (Ps. xcv. 6). How thankful we 
ought to be to almighty God for the blessings of the Gospel. It is to 
show our gratitude for this benefit that we stand while the Gospel 
is read during Mass. Three-quarters of the human race are still 
plunged in pagan darkness, that is to say about eight hundred mil- 
lions are heathens. They are to be found principally in Africa, 
India, China and Japan. Every year the Holy Father sends out 
more missioners to the heathen. Catholics ought to support these 
missioners by their prayers and their alms. The Association for 
the Propagation of the Faith, and of the Holy Childhood of Jesus, 
have been instituted for this object. 

2. Another form of idolatry is when a human being gives up 
his whole self to a creature. 

It would be absurd to call a man an idolater because he offers to 
a false god a few grains of incense which he ought to offer to the 
true God, and not to apply the same term to one who devotes his 
whole life to the world instead of to God. The avaricious are pre- 
eminently idolaters (Eph. v. 5), for they consecrate their every 
thought, their every exertion, they sacrifice their health, their life to 
Mammon, to the pursuit of this world's goods. " Covetousness is the 
service of idols " (Col. iii. 5). 

All who are engrossed in material interests are guilty of 
idolatry, especially the avaricious, the proud, the intemperate, 
the unchaste. 

Whatever a man desires and adores, that is his god. The god of 
the avaricious is gold (Osee viii. 4) ; the god of the proud is honor, 
the god of the glutton is his belly (Phil. iii. 19) ; the god of the 
unchaste his own lusts (1 Cor. vi. 15). The greed of gain, the 
pride of life, sensual pleasures, are worshipped by the worldling. 
Parents are also guilty of idolatry, if they cherish an inordinate 
affection for their children (Wisd. xiv. 15). 

3. The service of idols is high treason against the majesty of 
God, and the most heinous of sins. 

St. Thomas Aquinas declares the worship of idols to be the 
greatest of all sins. Among the Jews it was punishable by death 
(Exod. xxii. 20). On one occasion no less than twenty-three thousand 
Jews were put to death by God's command for this transgression 
(Exod. xxxii. 28). He who worships idols incurs the curse of God 
(Deut. xxvii. 15). Think of the lamentable condition of the heathen; 
some of them have become so degraded through idolatry that they 
have sunk into the vice of cannibalism. The Apostle says idolaters, 
adulterers, the covetous, drunkards, and others, shall not possess the 
kingdom of God Cor. vi. 10). 



TJie Ten Commandments of God. 315 



3. FOOLISH OR PERVERTED WORSHIP. 

1. Superstition, fortune-telling, spiritualism, and magic, are 
foolish and irrational forms of worship. 

1. Superstition consists in ascribing to created things powers 
which they do not possess, either by nature or in virtue of the 
prayers of the Church. 

Superstition is of pagan origin. Among the Romans the will of 
the gods was divined by the Haruspices from the entrails of 
animals. The Greeks consulted the oracle of Delphi : a priestess was 
seated upon a tripod above a fissure in the earth whence a stupefying 
vapor arose, and to her incoherent utterances when in a state of un- 
consciousness through this exhalation, a mystic meaning was at- 
tached. Many popular and local customs that linger among us in the 
present day are relics of heathen times. These superstitions are gen- 
erally found among people who do not care for religion ; superstition 
and unbelief go hand in hand. Children born on a Sunday are said 
to be fortune's favorites; Friday is considered an unlucky day for 
the commencement of an enterprise, or for starting on a journey; 
to sit down thirteen to table is regarded as a fatal omen. Some 
people wear charms, such as four-leaved clover, about them to ensure 
good fortune. What folly this is! These we call natural supersti- 
tions, because they refer to natural objects. On the other hand, those 
people are not to be called superstitious who make use of, or carry on 
their person things that the Church has consecrated or blessed, and 
which consequently are endued with supernatural efficacy. To wear 
a cross which has been blessed, or a rosary, or a relic, to take holy 
water, hoping thereby to be preserved by God from evil, is not super- 
stitious. But if a greater efficacy than they possess is ascribed to 
these things, for instance, if it is thought that the fact of lighting a 
blessed candle during a storm will avert the thunderbolt, that the 
mere wearing of, or recital of certain prayers will preserve from 
drowning or death by fire, then we have an instance of superstition. 
This kind of superstition is called religious, because it has reference 
to sacred objects. 

2. Fortune-telling or soothsaying is the attempt to discover 
hidden or future events by means of things that are not in them- 
selves calculated to reveal them. 

The heathens of old made use of astrology for this purpose ; from 
the course or conjunction of the planets they forecast the destiny of 
individuals. Even nowadays many people regard the appearance of 
a comet as presaging war or famine. The Roman augurs predicted 
wiiat was about to happen by watching the flight of birds, listening 
to the cries they uttered, or observing the manner in which the sacred 
fowls devoured their food. Whit a strange delusion! In the present 
day, however, Christians sometimes use cards as a means of divina- 
tion; if the public papers are to be believed, there are in Paris eight 
hundred women who tell fortunes by cards, and they are invited to 
the houses of the great to exercise their art. There are also many 



316 TJie Commandments, 

who believe in the portents of dreams, or in palmistry, or who think to 
foretell the future by the combinations of numbers and figures, and 
the like contemptible devices. They attach superstitious meaning to 
the howling of a dog at night, which is said to predict the death of its 
owner; the hour at which a watch happens to stop, etc. Those who 
play lottery connect certain numbers with certain events, either 
real or the phantoms of dreams. On the occasion of an earthquake 
in Rome in 1895, a million of francs was put into the lottery on the 
number eleven, this being the date of the earthquake, other tickets 
for large sums being taken for the hour and minute at which it 
occurred. All these numbers were drawn blanks. And that in this 
nineteenth century, the age of enlightenment ! On the other hand, 
the forecasts of meteorologists, or the prediction of what weather may 
be expected from the observation of natural phenomena, is of course 
perfectly legitimate. 

3. Spiritualism is the invocation of spirits in view of learn- 
ing v^hat is hidden from human ken. 

Spiritualists offer themselves to act as instruments or mediums to 
the spirits, their design being that some unknown spirit (that is a 
devil) should communicate with mankind by means of their hand or 
voice, or by some other manifestation, such as rapping. St. Thomas 
Aquinas says it is sinful to seek instruction from the devil, since the 
Holy Scriptures, the Word of God, are placed within our reach. 
" Let there not be found any one that consulteth spirits, for the Lord 
abhorreth all these things " (Deut. xviii. 11). Spiritualists are often 
excused on the plea that they are Christians, and call upon the 
name of God; but for that very reason they are to be condemned, 
because they profane God's holy name, and while professing to be 
Christians, they act as do the heathen. 

4. Magic or sorcery is the invocation of spirits in order to 
produce miraculous effects. 

It is an undeniable fact that among the heathen there were indi- 
viduals who worked wonders by the devil's aid. There were magi- 
cians in Egypt in the time of Moses, who by their enchantments 
imitated his miracles (Exod. vii. 11). In the days of the apostles 
a magician named Simon lived in Samaria and deluded many by his 
sorceries (Acts viii. 10). We are also told that Antichrist will per- 
form many lying wonders with the assistance of the evil one (2 Thess. 
ii. 9). The name of magician is not to be given to jugglers, who by 
skill and sleight of hand perform astonishing feats. 

2. This perverted form of worship is a grievous sin. 

God says : " The soul that shall go aside after magicians and 
soothsayers I will destroy out of the midst of its people" (Lev. xx. 
6). David says: "Thou hast hated them that regard vanities to no 
purpose" (Ps. xxx. 7). He who trusts to vain things or to evil 
spirits, ascribes more power to them than to God; he tacitly denies 
the divine attributes of sanctity, omnipotence, wisdom, etc. "How canst 
thou hope for grace from God," asks St. John Chrysostom, " if thou 
dost abandon Him and have recourse to the evil enemy? " This sin 



The Te7i Commandments of God. 317 

brings down severe chastisements from God. Ochozias, one of the 
kings of Israel, sent to inquire of Beelzebub, the god of Accaron, 
whether he should recover of his sickness. The prophet Elias met the 
messengers, and said to them : " Go and return to the king that sent 
you, and say to him : Thus saith the Lord, Is it because there was no 
God in Israel that thou sendeth to Beelzebub? Therefore thou shalt 
not come down from thy bed but thou shalt surely die " (4 Kings i.). 
Ochozias expired shortly after. Superstitious people have no peace; 
they are timid and apprehensive; every trifle alarms them; they are 
dismayed and afraid to act when they perceive what they consider 
as portents. Other sins follow in the train of this perversion of the 
reverence due to God; such as abuse of holy things, for instance, 
relics and images; or injustice and want of charity towards one's 
neighbor. Superstitious people are easily misled by their omens into 
rash judgments and hasty condemnations of others; or they refuse to 
do them a service lest it should bring ill-luck, etc. 

Sins Against the First Commandment, 

The First Commandment of God is transgressed: 

1. Bj neglecting prayer. 

The heathen had their household gods; they were to be seen in 
the halls of palaces as well as above the threshold of the lowliest 
dwellings. Yet Catholics, who worship the true God, too often deny 
Him the daily homage due to Him. The followers of Mohammed 
never omit, when the muezzin calls to prayer, to kneel down and per- 
form their orisons, even in public places, while Christians, who hold 
the true faith, do not scruple to dispense with prayer almost entirely. 
Tnhappy is the household where family prayer is an unknown thing I 

2. Bv opposing religion, either by speaking against the faith, 
or by the publication or dissemination of books and periodicals 
hostile to the faith, or by joining associations of an anti-Chris- 
tian character. 

3. By worshipping idols or being engrossed in material in- 
terests. 

4. By superstitions. 

5. By telling fortunes or having one's fortune told. 

6. By invoking spirits, either for the purpose of searching 
out what is hidden, or of doing what cannot be done in the or- 
dinary course of nature. 

Jf. THE VENERATION OF SAINTS. 

"We call those saints who died in the grace of God, and who 
are already in heaven, more especially those whom the Church 
has canonized. 

Canonization does not admit any one into heaven; it is only a 
solemn declaration on the part of the Pope that the man or woman 



318 The Commandments, 

in question has led a holy life (this having been proved by the exam- 
ination of his or her lifo), and that (as the miracles proved to have 
been wrought by the individual testify) he or she is already in 
heaven, and is therefore to be venerated by the Church. Canoniza- 
tion is preceded by beatification ; by this latter the individual is pro- 
posed for the veneration of a portion of the faithful only, whereas by 
canonization he is declared worthy to receive the cultus of the whole 
Church. The scrutiny to which the life and miracles are subjected 
is extremely rigorous; they are laid before a special congregation 
composed of cardinals, priests, physicians, scientists, who are ap- 
pointed to examine them by the Supreme Pontiff himself. This 
examination does not take place as a rule until fifty years after the 
death of the servant of God. On account of the great number of the 
saints, their different degree of glory, and the fact that their life was 
more in heaven than on earth, they are compared to the stars; or 
again to precious stones, rarely found upon earth and valuable in 
God'fj. sight; to the cypress, whose wood never decays, because they 
were not contaminated by the corruption of serious sin ; to the 
majestic cedars of Lebanon, by reason of the height of perfection 
they attained; to the fragrant lily, because by their good works they 
shed a sweet odor around them; to an anvil, unbroken by the blows 
of the hammer, for they stood steadfast beneath the strokes of mis- 
fortune. They are also said to be the pillars of the Church, for 
they sustain her by their prayers, and like the towers that crown a 
city, they add to her outward majesty and dignity. 

The Church ordains that those saints alone whom she has 
canonized should be publicly venerated by the faithful. 

The Church knows that the veneration of the saints is good and 
useful for us. Consequently she omits no opportunity of inciting us 
to it; at Baptism the name of a saint is given to the child who is 
made one of the members of the Church, and the same is done at 
Confirmation. Every day in the year some one or more saints are 
commemorated; statues and pictures of saints are placed in the 
churches, their names are mentioned in the Mass and invoked in 
litanies and public prayers. 

1. We honor the saints because they are the friends of God, 
princes of the heavenly court, and benefactors to ourselves; also 
because we obtain great graces from God through venerating them. 

We venerate the saints because they are the friends and servants 
of God. He who reverences the emperor will not fail to honor his 
servants, the ministers, or viceroy, etc., for the reverence paid to 
them is indirectly paid to the emperor himself. For this reason we 
venerate the friends and servants of God. Every man of good feeling 
likes his friends to be respected, and feels it to be a slight to himself 
if they are treated with contempt; how much more is this so with 
God. He desires that those who loved Him above all things on earth 
should receive special honor. While the saints lived here below, they 
fled from honors; nay, more, they were despised, calumniated, perse- 
cuted by evil men. Therefore God now wills that their innocence 
and virtue should be made clear, and they should be venerated by all 



The Ten Commandments of God, 319 

Christendom. God Himself gives honor to the saints; He works 
miracles through their intercession, and oftentimes inflicts condign 
punishment on those who show them disrespect. Christ Himself 
says : " If any man minister to Me, him will My Father honor " (John 
xii. 26). We venerate the saints on account of their exalted rank in 
heaven. If we show so much honor to kings by whom God rules the 
world, how much the more is it incumbent upon us to honor the celes- 
tial spirits whom God makes His instruments for the government 
of the Church, and of whole races of men, and also for the salvation 
of mankind; and whose dignity therefore far exceeds that of earthly 
princes. Most of the saints moreover have a claim on us for the 
services they have rendered to mankind ; heathen countries have been 
evangelized by them (witness St. Boniface, the apostle of Germany) ; 
others have maintained and defended the faith, as St. Ignatius of 
Loyola by forming the Society of Jesus; or again they have enriched 
the Church by their writings, as did St. Augustine. Many a time 
the saints have prevailed upon God on behalf of their fellow-men. 
He would have spared Sodom for the sake of ten just men (Gen. 
xviii. 32) ; for Joseph's sake He blessed the house of Putiphar (Gen. 
xxxix. 5) ; for the sake of the elect the days of judgment shall be 
shortened (Matt. xxiv. 22). After their death the saints offer suppli- 
cations before the throne of God for their kinsfolk and their people. 
The prophet Jeremias did not cease after death to pray for the 
Jewish people and for all the holy city (2 Mach. xv. 14). The saints 
in heaven and Christians upon earth are all members of one body. 
When one member suffers, all the members suffer with it, and they 
mutually succor one another. Thus the saints help us by their 
prayers. How much honor is paid to men who have deserved well 
of their contemporaries; their services are lauded and magnified, 
statues are erected to their memory, institutions, towns, streets are 
named after them; ought we not then to venerate our best benefac- 
tors ? If the man who rescues me from drowning has a claim on my 
gratitude, how much more those who have spent their strength in 
endeavoring to save me from eternal perdition! Furthermore, the 
Council of Trent tells us that the veneration of the saints is of prac- 
tical utility to ourselves; through them we obtain favors from God, 
besides a speedy answer to our prayers. Our petitions are much more 
favorably received by an earthly monarch if they are presented by 
one of his courtiers; so it is with God, and the more intercessors we 
have the better for us. What God might not grant to a single saint. 
He will not deny to several, just as an abbot cannot refuse to grant 
a request preferred by the whole of his community. Wherefore, as 
beggars go from house to house asking an alms, let us go through 
the streets of the heavenly city, appealing to the apostles, the martyrs, 
the virgins, and the confessors, imploring them to intercede on our 
behalf. 

2. We venerate the saints if we entreat their intercession with 
God, if we celebrate their feasts, reverence their images and their 
relics; if we bear their name, claim their protection in matters 
of importance, and praise them in word and song. The best man- 
ner in which to venerate them is to imitate their virtues. 

One day we are to be the companions of the saints in heaven, and 



320 TJie Commandments. " 

this prospect unites us to them in a mutual love. Both they and we be- 
long to the same great family whose father is God. This is the mean- 
ing of the communion of saints. Hence they espouse our cause, when 
we invoke their aid and their intercession with God. The fact of 
invoking them testifies to the esteem in which we hold them, and the 
value we attach to their prayers. We celebrate the feasts of the 
saints. In the earliest ages of the Church the day whereon the 
martyrs suffered was carefully noted down, to be commemorated an- 
nually. In the world great events are celebrated by a jubilee; why 
should not the same be done in the Church? The anniversaries of 
the saints are not holydays of obligation, excepting the feast of St. 
Peter and St. Paul in England, and the festival of All Saints here. 
And as we like to preserve in memory of the departed, little objects 
that have belonged to them, whether they be our own relatives and 
friends, or men of great renown, so the relics of the saints and their 
images are to be held in veneration. The names of heroes and great 
men are given to public institutions or buildings, so we receive the 
name of some saint or great servant of God at our Baptism and 
Confirmation, or on entering a religious Order, taking him or her for 
our patron. We also dedicate churches, towns, and countries to some 
saint, placing them under his protection. Heroes and illustrious men 
of past times often furnish a theme to the orator and the poet; so 
panegyrics are pronounced, and hymns sung in honor of the saints. 
But the most important thing is to imitate the saints. " To venerate 
the saints without following in their steps," says St. Augustine, " is 
merely offering them the incense of empty flattery." To read the 
lives of the saints is also a means of honoring them, for we read the 
record of their deeds in order to take them for patterns in our own 
actions. 

3. The veneration we pay to the saints does not in the 
least detract from the honor due to God, for v^e only reverence 
the saints for God's sake, and by no means do we reverence them 
in the way that we reverence God, but only because they are 
the servants of God. 

The veneration of the saints does not detract from the honor due 
to God. Who would think of saying that it showed want of respect 
to the emperor to honor his mother, his children, his friends, and 
faithful servants? On the contrary, it would rather evince our re- 
spect for him (St. Jerome). By venerating the saints of God we no 
more detract from the honor due to Him than we do by charity 
towards our neighbor, and we know that the love of God increases 
with the love of one's neighbor. We honor the saints because in 
them the divine image is reflected. We reverence a portrait of the 
king as being a faithful representation of the monarch to whom we 
owe allegiance; so we reverence the saints because we see the image 
of God in them. We love them as we love our fellow-men; they are 
made after God's image, and are His children. We also venerate the 
saints because they were instruments employed by God to perform 
new and signal deeds. We do not honor them for what they were in 
and by themselves; their works do not redound to their own glory, 
so much as to the glory of God, Who worked by their agency. Thus 



The Ten Commandments of God, 321 

the credit of a beautiful picture does not belong to the brush, or a 
clever book to the pen, or an eloquent discourse to the lips that 
merely repeated it. God alone is wonderful in His saints. The 
Blessed Mother of God did not say: " I have done great things; " but, 
"He that is mighty hath done great things to me" (Luke i. 49). 
And as by venerating the saints we honor God, so by despising the 
saints we dishonor God. Our Lord declared that to despise His 
apostles was tantamount to despising Himself (I ^:e x. 16), and that 
He regarded every act of unkindness towards one's neighbor as an act 
of unkindness to Himself (Matt. xxv. 40). And since God loves th? 
saints in heaven far more than men on earth. He must be deeply 
affronted by disrespect shown to them. An additional reason why 
veneration of the saints in no wise diminishes our reverence for 
God, is because we do not honor them as we honor God. We adore 
God, but we do not adore the saints, so we do not pay to them the 
supreme homage that we pay to God, for we know that the distance 
between Him and them is infinite. However superior the saints are 
to us, they are only creatures like ourselves. The esteem and ven- 
eration in which we hold them is the same in kind as that in which 
we hold the servants of God on earth, only it is greater in degree, be- 
cause the saints have already passed as victors into the Church 
Triumphant. The saints do not desire the adoration of men. When 
Tobias and his family prostrated themselves before the angel, he said : 
"Bless ye God, sing praises to Him" (Tob. xii. 18). When St. John 
the Divine fell down before the feet of the angel, he said to him: 
" See thou do it not, adore God" (Apoc. xix. 10). And if we kneel 
beside the tomb or before the image of a saint, we no more adore 
him than a servant adores his master if he goes on his knees to ask 
a favor of him. If the holy sacrifice is offered in honor of a saint, 
if churches and altars are dedicated to him, it is only in the hope 
that he will unite his prayers to the sacrifices we offer, the prayers we 
say at his shrine; and we praise God, Who led the saint in so mar- 
vellous a way to the attainment of sanctity. Thus veneration of the 
saints is not idolatry, nor does it betray want of confidence in Christ, 
our great Mediator. It rather betokens mistrust of ourselves, a 
humble spirit. Conscious of our own unworthiness to present our 
petitions to Christ, we have recourse to a mediator whose prayers will 
have greater weight with Him than our own. 

4. It is advisable under different circumstances of life to 
invoke certain saints. 

Experience has proved how much is gained by invoking the saints 
in times of special need. We invoke St. Joseph as the patron of a 
happy death, because he expired in the arms of Jesus and Mary; 
also in seasons of temporal distress, for on him the Child Jesus was 
dependent for His maintenance. For diseases of the throat St. Blase 
is to be invoked, who miraculously cured a boy thus afflicted; for 
diseases of the eye we call on St. Ottilia for aid, because she, when 
blind, recovered her sight at her Baptism. Those who suffer through 
calumny find a protector in St. John Nepomucene, who was a martyr 
to the seal of confession ; and when anything is lost, we have recourse 
to St. Anthony, through whose prayers the thief who had stolen 
from him a valuable manuscript, had no peace until he restored it. 



322 The Commandments, 

It appears that God lias given to individual saints special powers to 
help us in special needs. Many wonderful answers to prayer lead to 
the belief that the saints take particular interest in persons whose cir- 
cumstances are the same as theirs were on earth, and whose calling 
or state of life is the same as was their own, as well as for the place 
where they lived and labored. 



5. THE VENERATION OF THE MOTHER OF GOD. 

Many are the types of our blessed Lady to be found in the Old 
Testament ; e.g., Eve, the mother of all mankind ; Noe's ark, wherein 
the human race was preserved from extinction; the Ark of the Cov- 
enant containing the manna ; Judith who slew Holof ernes, the arch- 
enemy of her people; Esther, who was exempted from the universal 
law (as Mary was from original sin), and by her mediation rescued 
her people from death; the mother of the Machabees, who witnessed 
the death of her seven sons, and whose heart, like Mary's, was pierced 
with seven swords, etc. The Gospels gave little information respect- 
ing the life of Our Lady; more concerning it may be learned from 
the revelations of the saints. 

Mary, the Mother of Jesus Christ, is usually called the 
Mother of God or the Most Blessed Virgin. 

Elizabeth was the first to call Mary Mother of God (Luke i. 43). 
The Council of Ephesus, in 431, confirmed this title, Dei Genitrix, 
and condemned the contrary doctrine asserted by the heretic ITes- 
torius. Mary gave birth to Him Who is God and man in one person. 
A child does not receive its soul from its mother, but from God, yet 
she of whom it is born is called its mother; in like mrnner Mary is 
justly termed the "Mother of God," although Christ did not derive 
from her His divine nature. Mary is also rightly called " the Blessed 
Virgin." The words she spoke to the angel announced her determina- 
tion to preserve her virginity inviolate (Luke i. 34). Many ages 
before the prophet Isaias foretold that a virgin should conceive and 
bear a Son (Is. vii. 14). In her conception, in child-bearing, and 
after the birth of Jesus, Mary remained a virgin. As the bush 
burned with fire and was not consumed, so Mary's virginity was not 
impaired by the birth of Christ; as Our Lord appeared in the midst 
of the apostles although the doors of the room where they were as- 
sembled were shut, so He came into the world, and her chastity 
remained intact. So the sun shines through glass without in any 
wise changing it. Mary is the window of heaven, through which the 
true Light came into the world. Those who are spoken of in the 
Gospels as the hrethren of Christ (Matt. xiii. 55) are His blood rela- 
tions; it was customary among the Jews to term near relatives 
brethren. Abraham called his nephew Lot by this name (Gen. xiii. 
8) . " Had Mary had other children who could have taken care of her, 
Our Lord upon the cross would not have commended her," as St. John 
Chrysostom remarks, "to the beloved disciple." Christ was called the 
" first-born," to indicate the fact that He was, according to Jewish law, 
sanctified to the Lord (Exod. xiii. 2). Christ was, in fact, the first- 



The Ten Commandments of God, 323 

Dorn among many brethren (Rom. viii. 29), that is, all Christian 
people, who are besides the children of Mary. Mary was espoused to 
Joseph by God's command, in order that she might not be stoned 
after the birth of Christ, and also in order to provide a guardian for 
her and the divine Child. The name Mary is a Hebrew word, mean- 
ing lady, or mistress. 

We pay greater honor to Mary, the Mother of Christ, than to 
any other saint. 

Even in her lifetime, Mary had great honor paid to her; at the 
Annunciation the angel addressed her as "full of grace," and 
" blessed among women " (Luke i. 28). It is a great honor if an angel 
appears to mortal men and affords them an opportunity of showing 
him reverence; yet at the Annunciation it was not man who rever- 
enced the angel, but the angel who reverenced man. " Hence," St. 
Thomas Aquinas says, "we conclude that Mary excels the angels 
in dignity." How respectfully Elizabeth treated Mary; she called 
her blessed, and gave her the title of Mother of her Lord (Luke i. 42, 
43). Mary herself foresaw that she would be praised by posterity, 
for she said : "From henceforth all generations shall call me blessed " 
(Luke i. 48). The Church invites us to honor the Mother of God 
with special devotion. The Hail Mary is almost invariably added to 
the Our Father ; three times a day the Angelus bell reminds us of the 
mystery of the Incarnation, and bids us invoke the name of Mary; 
many festivals have been instituted in her honor, the Litany of 
Loretto is recited at the public services of the Church; the month of 
May, the fairest month in the year, is dedicated to her, and during 
October the Rosary is daily recited. Moreover, numerous churches 
are erected in all lands in honor of the Mother of God, not a few of 
these being renowned places of pilgrimage, where signal graces 
and favors are obtained ; and the most glorious titles are given to her, 
such as : Channel of grace, Mother of mercy, Refuge of sinners. Help 
of Christians, Queen of heaven, etc. Yet the veneration we pay to 
Mary is distinct from the adoration due to God. Exalted honor is 
due to Mary, but the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost alone, 
do we adore. 

1. We hold Mary in such great veneration because she is the 
Mother of God and our Mother. 

Whoever truly loves God must assuredly honor the Mother of 
God, and honor her, too, far above all the saints, the friends of God. 
The honor paid to the Queen-Mother is reflected upon the King, her 
Son. One may judge of the measure in which a man loves God by 
his devotion to Mary. In fact, the greater the saint, the more intensely 
does he love Mary. She is actually our Mother, for Our Lord gave 
her to us upon the cross when He said to St. John : " Behold thy 
Mother" (John xix. 27), John representing on Calvary all the follow- 
ers of Christ. Mary is the second Eve, the Mother of all mankind; 
as the disobedience of Eve brought misery upon the human race, 
so the obedience of Mary restores it to a state of grace. Through 
one woman death came into the world, through another, life. And 
since Mary is our Mother, our salvation is more a matter of concern 
to her than to any of the saints. After Christ no one cares for us 



324 The Commandments. 

as she does. St. Bernard declares that the love of all the mothers in 
the world does not equal the love Mary bears to each one of her chil- 
dren. And the reason she cares so much for us is because of her 
love for God, and consequently her charity towards her neighbor 
exceeds that of any other saint. As the glory of the moon surpasses 
that of the stars, so the love of Mary for us exceeds that of the 
angels; it is a boundless ocean of love. Mary knows all our circum- 
stances; this even the angels do (Luke xv. 7), and it cannot be sup- 
posed that they know more than does their Queen. A dutiful child 
delights to be with its mother, and the devout Christian rejoices to 
address to Mary, the Mother of God, his loving supplications. 

2. Another reason why Mary is so highly honored throughout 
Christendom, is because God has exalted her above all men and 
angels. 

Monarchs grant privileges to the towns where they were born, 
or where they were crowned; so the King of heaven has conferred 
special privileges and prerogatives on the Mother who bore Him. 

Mar J was, in fact, chosen by God to be the Mother of His 
Son, preserved from the stain of original sin, raised gloriously 
from the tomb, and crowned Queen of heaven. 

ISTo angel, not even the most perfect and greatest of the heavenly 
host, can say to God as Mary can : " Thou art my Son." O what a 
marvellous privilege is this ! Mary is indeed the Mater admirabilis, 
and that not alone because she is at one and the same time Virgin 
and Mother, nor because she is Mother both of the creature and of 
the Creator, but pre-eminently because she gave birth to Him Who 
was the Author of her being. Mary is the wonder of wonders, and 
nothing in the universe, God only excepted, is more glorious than she 
is. Mary's spotless purity, her sinlessness, was first proclaimed by 
God in paradise (Gen. iii. 15), and afterwards by the archangel 
Gabriel (Luke i. 28). God said to the serpent, " She shall crush thy 
head." Had Mary been brought under the dominion of the devil by 
sin, she could not possibly have been his conqueror. Gabriel saluted 
Mary as " full of grace." The dignity of Christ alone demanded 
that His Mother should be entirely free from sin. When God raises 
any one to a high post. He fits him for it; and the Son of God, in 
choosing Mary to be His Mother, rendered her by the gifts of grace 
fit for this exalted dignity (St. Thomas Aquinas). Now we know 
that no one who built a house for his own use, would first put his 
greatest enemy in possession of it ; much less would the Holy Spirit, 
Whose temple Mary was to be, allow the evil one to make her his own. 
The Fathers of the Church and the children of the Church in all 
ages, have given to Mary the title of immaculate both in their writ- 
ings and in their prayers ; and in 1854 the Holy Father declared her 
Immaculate Conception to be a dogma of tbe faith. Mary was there- 
fore free from original and actual sin (Council of Trent, 6, 23) ; she 
is compared to a lily among thorns (Cant. ii. 2), a mirror without a 
flaw (Wisd. vii. 26). She advanced in perfection rapidly and con- 
tinuously, like the vine (Ecclus. xxiv. 23) that grows higher and 
higher, till it attains the height of the tree to which it clings. She 



Tfie Ten Commandments of God, 325 

advanced all the more rapidly, because she was so near to the source of 
all grace, and was the recipient of greater and more abundant graces 
than other men. Mary was the most holy and perfect of all crea- 
tures ; and her sanctity surpassed that of all other saints as much as 
the light of the moon exceeds in brilliance that of the planets. Even 
in the first moments of her existence, Mary's sanctity was greater 
than that of the most eminent saints at the close of their life. On 
account of her exalted sanctity she is compared to the tower of David 
(Cant. iv. 4), which rose in majestic stateliness on the highest 
summit of the mountains about Jerusalem. She is also called the 
mirror of justice. Of all created beings none ever loved God so in- 
tensely as Mar3^ did, or cared so little for the things of earth. As the 
action of fire causes iron to glow with heat, so the Holy Spirit in- 
flamed the heart of Mary with charity. On account of her great love 
she is called the house of gold. Mary was adorned with every virtue. 
She is the mystical rose, for as the rose surpasses all other flowers 
in the beauty of its coloring and the fragrance of its perfume, so 
Mary exceeds all the saints in the magnitude of her love for God, 
and the sweet odor of her virtues. She is the Queen of whom the 
Psalmist speaks (Ps. xliv. 11), clad in the golden garments of charity, 
surrounded by a variety of virtues. " Thus," Suarez declares, " she 
was dearer to God than all the other saints together." The body of 
the Blessed Virgin was assumed gloriously into Leaven. It is said 
that the apostle Thomas, having arrived in Jerusalem too late to 
assist at her interment, was desirous to see her remains in the 
sepulchre; but when it was opened nothing was found there but the 
grave-clothes in which her body had been wrapped. Catherine Em- 
merich in her visions asserts that Our Blessed Lady died forty-eight 
years after the birth of Christ, at the age of sixty-four. Having 
gone from Ephesus to Jerusalem to follow again the footsteps of her 
Son in the way of the cross, she fell mortally sick and died of grief ; 
hence her tomb was in Jerusalem. The feast of her Assumption is 
kept throughout the whole Church on the fifteenth of August. No 
one has ever claimed to possess a relic of her body. Mary shines in 
heaven with unrivalled splendor. The sun, moon, and stars of our 
solar system are symbols of Christ, His Mother and the saints. Mary 
is the Queen of angels, the Queen of all saints. In her more than 
in any other creature we gain a knowledge of the divine attributes. 
Most especially we see displayed in her glorious exaltation the 
infinite goodness of God, Who raises the poor man from the dunghill, 
that He may set him with princes and elevate him above the choirs of 
celestial spirits (Ps. cxii. 7, 8). 

3. Finally, we entertain this great veneration for Mary, be- 
cause her intercession is more powerful with God than that of any 
other saint. 

Mary's intercession has immense power with God. On earth her 
petitions were all-prevailing with Christ, as at the marriage-feast 
at Cana. And if Christ granted all His Mother's prayers on earth, 
how much the more will He do so in heaven. When the General 
Coriolanus could not be prevailed upon by the Senate and priests of 
Rome to withdraw his army from before the city, he yielded to the 
entreaties of his mother Veturia, although he knew that to do so 



326 The Commandmerits. 

would cost him his life. How much the more will Christ, the great 
Lawgiver, listen to the supplications of His Mother ! If the prayers 
of the saints, His servants, have so much power with God, what 
must those of His Mother have ! Being the praj'-ers of a mother, they 
are less like a petition than a command. St. Bernard declares Mary 
to be omnipotent by means of her intercession; there is nothing that 
she cannot obtain for us. As at the court of an earthly monarch 
he is sure to succeed for whom the queen interests herself, so at 
the court of the King of kings those for whom Mary, the Queen of 
heaven, pleads, will not be disappointed of their desires. Thus Mary 
is our hope; because through her intercession we hope to procure 
the blessings which our poor prayers cannot obtain. Hence the 
saints speak of her as the dispenser of graces, for all the favors we 
receive from heaven come to us through her hands. " God," St. 
Peter Damian says, "would not become man until Mary had given 
her consent, in order that we might see that the salvation of man- 
kind rested in her hands." She stood beneath the cross that we 
might know that without her mediation no one could be made par- 
taker of the merits of the blood of Christ. God the Father sanctions, 
Christ grants, and Mary distributes the gifts of heaven to man- 
kind. Thus Mary is the Mother of divine grace. No prayer she 
proffers is unanswered. " Who can doubt," exclaims St. Bernard, 
"that the Son will listen to His Mother — such a Son to such a 
Mother ! " Eemember how the same saint declares in the Memorare 
that it is a thing unheard of for any one to implore Mary's aid, and 
implore in vain. Even the least and shortest prayer to Mary does not 
go unrecompensed ; she rewards the slightest intentions with the rich- 
est graces. Every time Vv^e salute her she does not fail to return our 
greeting. She is the Virgin most clement. There is not a trace of 
sternness about her; she is all clemency, loving kindness and gentle- 
ness. He would be wrong indeed who approached her with trem- 
bling. 

From time immemorial Christians have been accustomed to 
have recourse to Mary in times of affliction and distress. 

In the year 1683, when the Turks besieged Vienna, both in the 
beleaguered city and throughout Christendom the Rosary was re- 
cited to implore the aid of the Mother of God, and a signal victory 
was the result. Individual Christians also appeal to Mary for aid 
when private troubles press heavily upon them. She is called the 
Help of Christians, the Comforter of the afflicted, the Health of the 
sick. Christians call upon her in seasons of severe sickness. It is 
recorded of St. John Damascene, that when the caliph, enraged with 
him for having written in defence of the veneration of images, 
caused his right hand to be struck off, the saint prostrated himself 
before a statue of Our Lady, and was immediately healed. In the 
present day how numerous are the miraculous cures effected at 
Lourdes! To Mary also is due the conversion of many sinners who 
desire to amend their lives, for upon those who invoke her the light 
of the Holy Spirit is shed. Mary is the morning star; as that planet 
heralds the sunrise, so devotion to Mai^r is the forerunner of divine 
grace, the gracious influence of the Holy Ghost. She is compared 
to the dawn (Cant. vi. 9), because as the shades of night vanish 



The Ten Commandments of God, 327 

before the rising sun, so sin departs from the soul that is devoted to 
Mary. The month of May is dedicated to her, because nature then 
awakens to a new life, and devotion to Mary brings fresh life to the 
soul dead in sin. Witness the miraculous conversion of the public 
sinner, Mary of Egypt, before an image of Our Lady in the Church 
of the Holy Cross in Jerusalem. Mary is ever desirous to effect our 
reconciliation with God, far more so than any earthly mother could 
be to establish peace between two members of her family who were at 
enmity with each other. Through her intercession Our Lord's anger 
is easily appeased. Alexander the Great once said : " A single tear 
from my mother's eyes will blot out many death-warrants." If a 
man, and a heathen to boot, will speak thus of his mother, what may 
we not expect from the divine Son of Mary? She is the Refuge of 
sinners; the Mother of mercy; from her as from an olive tree to 
which she is likened (Eccles. xxiv. 19), the softening oil of mercy 
flows. She is our mediatrix ; to her we fly in temptation ; as the Jews 
on their entrance into the Promised Land (Numb. x. 35), and in their 
wars with the Philistines (1 Kings xiv.) carried with them the ark 
of the Lord to insure victory, so through Mary, the Ark of the Cov- 
enant of the i^ew Testament, are we enabled to conquer our spiritual 
foes. As the star guides the mariner, tossing on the stormy sea, to 
a safe haven, so Mary guides us over the tempestuous ocean of life 
to the celestial port. She is compared in Holy Scripture to a plane- 
tree in the streets (Eccles. xxiv. 19), because as the tree protects 
the wayfarer from sun and rain, so Mary defends those who place 
themselves under her care from the assaults of the devil. To the 
enemy of mankind she is "terrible as an army set in array" (Cant. 
vi. 3). Various titles are given to Mary to indicate the circum- 
stances in which we may invoke her aid and trust in her succor, 
such as : Mother of perpetual succor, Mother of good counsel. Mother 
of dolors, etc. 

Devotion to the Mother of God is an excellent means of at- 
taining sanctity here below and eternal happiness hereafter. 

No one can fail to observe the filial affection and devotion which 
all the saints have displayed towards the Mother of God, and the 
signal success with which God has rewarded this devotion on their 
part. Among the most prominent of these was St. Bernard of Clair- 
vaux, and in later times St. Alphonsus Liguori, the author of the 
" Glories of Mary." Mary is the gate of heaven ; a ladder connecting 
heaven and earth, by which the Lord of heaven came down to us, and 
by which we may ascend up to God. St. Alphonsus declares it to be 
his persuasion that hell cannot boast of containing one single soul 
who ever had a true and heartfelt devotion to Mary. St. Bernard 
asserts that those who honor her daily will assuredly be saved. St. 
Francis Borgia always feared for the salvation of that soul which 
had little or no devotion for the Mother of God. 

6. THE VENERATION OF IMAGES OF THE SAINTS. 

The veneration of sacred pictures and images is as old as Chris- 
tianity itself. In the Catacombs representations are found of Christ, 
of the Mother of God with the divine Child, and of biblical scenes 



328 The Commandments, 

from the Old or ISTew Testament, calculated to strengthen the Chris- 
tians in times of persecution, by reminding them of God's omnipo- 
tence and of a future resurrection. With the spread of Christianity 
the veneration paid to images increased. Pictures, statues, and 
crosses, were seen not in the churches alone, but on the market-place 
and highways. In the eighth century the Emperor of the East pro- 
hibited the veneration of images; the figures of the saints were 
broken to pieces or burned, the paintings on the walls of the 
churches were whitewashed over, and any persons who persisted in 
venerating images were punished (this was called the iconoclastic 
movement). The veneration of images answers to a need of our 
human nature; we respect the portraits of those whom we love or 
esteem; moreover it is the will of God that man, who lost true hap- 
piness for the sake of material things, should regain it by means of 
material things. The Jews were strictly forbidden to make images 
or bow down to them (Exod. xx. 4), because they had a strong propen- 
sity towards idolatry, and the Son of God had not then become man. 
In spite of this prohibition there were two golden cherubim, one on 
each side of the propitiatory in the Holy of holies (Exod. xxv. 18), 
and we also read of a brazen serpent in the wilderness, whereon the 
Israelites were commanded to look that they might be healed (Numb, 
xxi. 8). 

Bj sacred pictures or statues are meant representations of 
Christ, of the saints, or of the truths of religion. 

The manner in which Our Lord is ordinarily depicted is familiar 
to all of us; the expression of His countenance is grave and benign. 
His eyes are blue, His hair is of a ruddy brown, curling and parted 
in the middle, His beard is short, and a burning heart is often 
placed upon His breast. The Mother of God is represented in various 
ways : as Help of Christians she holds the divine Child in her arms : 
as Mother of dolors, the dead Christ is laid across her knees ; as Oui 
Lady of the Immaculate Conception she is as she appeared at 
Lourdes, in a white robe, without her Infant Son; as Queen of 
heaven (Apoc. xii. 1) with her head encircled with twelve stars and 
the moon beneath her feet. The most celebrated and well-known 
pictures of the Mother of God are : (1) The painting in the Church 
of Santa Maria Maggiore in Eome, supposed to be the work of St. 
Luke; (2) The Madonna di San Sisto, painted by Kafael; (3) The 
miraculous picture of Our Lady of Perpetual Succor, painted upon 
wood, and dating from the thirteenth century, in the Church of St. 
Alphonsus in Rome. The representations of the saints are easily 
recognized; they have a nimbus round their head, and are accom- 
panied by emblems either of their office, of the special virtue that 
distinguished them, or by the instruments wherewith they suffered 
martyrdom. The four Evangelists are known by their symbols: St. 
Matthew has an angel in human shape beside him, because his gospel 
begins with the genealogy of Our Lord ; St. Mark has a lion, because 
he speaks in the opening chapter of a voice crying in the wilderness ; 
St. Luke is accompanied by an ox, because he begins with Zacharias' 
sacrifice; St. John by an eagle, because his gospel begins with 
sublime and lofty truths. We also call those sacred pictures which 
portray some great truth, such as the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, 



TJie Ten Commandments of God, 329 

or purgatory ; or some event recorded in Holy Scripture. The three 
divine persons are represented under the form they have assumed 
when appearing to men. But all delineations of the Godhead do no 
more than give an idea of certain attributes or actions of the Deity, 
for it is not within the power of man to make an image of God. 

Pictures or statues of saints, by means of which or before 
which miracles have been worked, are called miraculous images. 

There are a great many places of pilgrimage on the continent of 
Europe where an image of Our Ladj'- is to be seen, by means of which 
extraordinary favors and graces have been and are obtained. Among 
these Einsiedeln in Switzerland, Alt-Otting in Bavaria, Kevelaer 
in the Rhineland may be mentioned. It is also well known that 
many cures have been effected through devotion to the Infant Jesus 
of Prague (a wax statue in the church of the Carmelites in that 
city), especially at the time of the pestilence in 1713. The Empress 
Maria Teresa had a great veneration for that image; she worked a 
robe for it with her own hands, richly embroidered with gold. Many 
of these miraculous images have been preserved from destruction in 
a marvellous manner ; they have, for instance, been in the fire without 
being burned. Many signal cures have been wrought in a moment, 
in answer to prayers offered before them. Such miracles are per- 
mitted by God as an attestation to the truth of the Catholic Church, 
and it would be a sin on the part of any Catholic to deny their 
authenticity. A strict investigation is made of these miracles by 
the Holy See, and then the statue of the saint is crowned. 

Above all representations of the saints or of holy things, we 
venerate the cross of Our Kedeemer. 

There ought not to be a single church, or altar, or cemetery, with- 
out a crucifix. Such is the honor in which the Church holds the 
cross of Christ, that she allows no sacrament to be administered, no 
Mass to be celebrated, no act of divine worship to be performed 
unless in presence of the crucifix. The cross is seen on the crown of 
the monarch, on the breast of the bishop, and it is awarded as a 
decoration to men of merit. The cross is in the hand of the dying 
Christian when he draws his last breath, and it accompanies him to 
the grave. This sacred symbol ought to be found in every Christian 
household; it does not speak well for the inhabitants of a house if 
none but secular pictures adorn its walls. 

1. We honor the images of the saints by giving them a place 
in our dwellings ; we say our prayers before them, we salute them 
respectfully, we adorn them with offerings, we make pilgrimages 
to their shrines. 

The reverence we pay to the image of a saint is not paid to the 
picture or image itself, but to the individual it represents ; that is, to 
Christ, or some one of the saints. When we adore the cross we adore 
Him Who died thereon. By showing respect to the portrait of a 
king, we testify our respect for the monarch, and disrespect mani- 
fested to his portrait is a personal affront to himself. When the 
book of the Gospels is kissed, it is the Word of God therein contained 



330 The Commandments. 

that is venerated. Thus when we kiss our parents or our children, 
we express the love and fondness of our hearts, and in venerating 
images, we express our love for the persons they represent. And 
when incense is burned, or tapers lighted before the images, it is as a 
symbol of the light of the Holy Ghost and the virtues wherewith the 
saints were endowed. It is not from the images themselves that we 
ask help, it is from God, through the intercession of the saints. 
JSTone but the heathen imagine that there is any virtue or super- 
natural power in the image itself. Moses did not think that his staff 
worked miracles, but God Who powerfully assisted him. 

2. Through venerating the images of the saints, efficacious and 
oftentimes supernatural graces are obtained; they are also useful 
as a means of avoiding distractions in prayer, and affording us 
a silent admonition. 

St. John Damascene says that the Holy Spirit surrounds the 
images of the saints with a certain halo of grace. Wherever the cross 
is erected, the malicious designs of the evil one are defeated. How 
often a soul sunk in sin has been touched and converted by the sight 
of an image; how often have pictures comforted and encouraged 
devout persons, especially at the moment of death! While gazing 
upon an image we pray with greater recollection; images are steps 
whereby we ascend more easily in spirit to heaven. And as one's 
prayers, when offered at the shrine of some saint are more fervent, " 
so they are more readily granted; the ex-votos hung beside the image 
testify to the efficacy of the saint's intercession — they are also a 
constant admonition to us ; either by placing vividly before us one of 
the truths of religion, or exhorting us to imitate the example of the 
saint. The work of the artist does indeed often prove more in- 
fluential than the words of the preacher, for the impressions we 
receive through the ear have less effect upon the mind than those 
which we receive through the eye. St. Gregory the Great calls 
pictures the books of the unlearned. In the Middle Ages, before 
there were any printed books, pictures were widely disseminated 
among the people. From those times we date the crib, the sepulchre, 
the stations of the cross, etc. 

7. THE VENERATION OF RELICS. 

The name of relic is given to the remains of the saints, as 
well as to objects that have been closely connected with Christ 
or the saints. 

The body of a saint is a relic, or any portion of it, even the most 
minute particle of bone. These relics are placed beneath or upon our 
altars: they also pass into the possession of private persons. Those 
only are authentic to which the name of the saint and the episcopal 
seal is attached. The relics themselves must not be sold, but this 
prohibition does not apply to the case containing them. From time 
immemorial those objects also which are closely connected with Our 
Lord or the saints have been held in high veneration; for instance, 
the cross of Christ, His tunic, His winding-sheet, the manger wherein 



The Ten Commandments of God, 331 

the Infant Jesus was laid, Veronica's veil, etc. The holy cross 
was discovered by the Empress Helena in the year 325, and a portion 
of it is in the Church of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem. A part 
of the manger is in the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Kome. 
The seamless coat of Our Lord is in the Cathedral of Treves. (In 
1891 it was exposed for six weeks, and two thousand of the faithful 
came to adore it. During that period eleven authentic cases of 
miraculous cure took place.) At Argenteuil, near Paris, another 
garment worn by Our Lord when a child is preserved; it was pre- 
sented by Charlemagne to the church. The holy winding-sheet is in 
Turin; Veronica's veil is in St. Peter's at Rome. Several other 
important relics are preserved in the Cathedral of Aix-la-Chapelle. 
The whole of Palestine is to the Christian a sacred and precious 
relic ; the seven crusades undertaken to recover it from the Saracens 
prove how much it was valued in the Middle Ages. The principal 
holy places are: The place of crucifixion and the sepulchre on Mount 
Calvary; the scene of Our Lord's agony and the spot whence He 
ascended on Mount Olivet ; the cenacle on Mount Sion, His birthplace 
at Bethlehem and the holy house of ISTazareth, now at Loretto. At 
all these places churches were erected, mostly by the Emperor Con- 
stantino, or his mother, St. Helena. The garments worn by martyi's 
and the instruments of their execution, the spots where eminent 
saints were born or are buried, have always been held in veneration. 
It was formerly the custom to erect churches and altars for the cele- 
bration of divine worship over places thus hallowed, especially where 
the saints are interred. 

Relics are deserving of veneration for this reason, because 
the bodies of the saints were temples of the Holy Ghost, and 
instruments whereby He worked; and they will rise glorious 
from the grave. 

The Jews regarded a dead body as an unclean thing, but the Chris- 
tian looks upon it with respect, as having been the dwelling-place 
of the Holy Ghost, and as being the seed whence the immortal, glori- 
fied body v/ill spring at the resurrection. Moreover, as St. Jerome re- 
marks, by honoring the saints, we adore Him for Whom they died. 
God Himself shows them honor, for by their medium He works mir- 
acles. Many bodies, or portions of the bodies of saints still remain 
incorrupt and snpple, as that of St. Teresa, or St. Francis Xavier; 
some emit a delicious fragrance; from others an oil distils possessed 
of healing properties. " God," says St. John Chrysostom, " has divided 
the possession of the saints between Himself and us; He has taken 
their souls to Himself, and has left their bodies for us." 

1. We honor the relics of the saints by preserving them with 
reverence, and visiting the spot where they are deposited. 

Even among the Jews relics were regarded with reverence. At 
the exit from Egypt Moses took Joseph's bones with him (Exod. xiii. 
19). The early Christians also had great respect for relics. When 
St. Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch, was torn to pieces by lions, two of 
his companions came by night and gathered up his bones, carrying 
them to Antioch. When St. Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna, was burned 



332 The Commandments. 

alive, the Christians collected his ashes, valuing them more than 
jewels. At an early date it was customary to erect chapels or altars 
above the tombs of martyrs, and offer the holy sacrifice over their re- 
mains. Relics are usually enclosed in costly reliquaries, richly dec- 
orated. It is out of respect for the dead that we lay wreaths on 
their coffins, and deck their graves with flowers. Relics of great 
value, such as the portions of the true cross, or of the manger at 
Bethlehem, are encased in gold or silver; likewise some of the bodies 
of the saints. From time immemorial pilgrimages have been made 
to the sepulchres of the saints. For nineteen centuries the faithful 
have been wont to visit the tombs of the apostles in Rome or the holy 
places in Palestine. The early Christians flocked in such numbers 
to the Holy Land that the places in Jerusalem were thronged with 
devout worshippers. Any one who had not been thither esteemed him- 
self a worse Christian than his neighbors. " We visit the sepulchres 
of the saints," says St. John Chrysostom, " and prostrate ourselves 
there in order to obtain some grace which we need." 

2. We obtain many blessings from God by venerating relics. 

Relics are a source whence spiritual benefits come to us from 
God. St. John Damascene says : " As water gushed from the rock 
in the wilderness at God's command, so by His will blessings flow 
from the relics of the saints." Where the remains of saints or 
martyrs are interred the snares of the devil lose their potency and 
obstinate maladies are healed. St. Augustine relates numerous cures 
effected by the relics of St. Stephen in Africa, besides the raising from 
the dead of two children. In the Old Testament we read of a dead 
man restored to life on coming in contact with the bones of the 
prophet Eliseus (4 Kings xiii. 21). Even in their lifetime the 
bodies of the saints were instrumental in working miracles. By the 
shadow of St. Peter (Acts v. 15), and by the handkerchiefs or girdlas 
worn by St. Paul (Acts xix. 12), the sick were delivered from their 
infirmities. But it must be remembered it is not by the relics them- 
selves that these miracles are wrought, but by God. Hence it is not 
a superstitious act on the part of pious persons when they visit places 
of pilgrimage, where God is pleased to work wonders by means of 
relics or images of the saints. 



8. THE EXTRAORDINARY WORSHIP OF GOD. 

We can, moreover, honor God by taking an oath or by making 
a vow. 

To take an oath or make a vow is not an ordinary occurrence of 
our lives; it is only done in peculiar, i.e., extraordinary cases. An 
oath is taken when human witness or asseveration is not sufficient; 
a vow is made when we voluntarily pledge ourselves to do something 
for God. We honor God by an oath, because we thereby acknowledge 
His omnipotence. His justice, His holiness. And by a vow we offer 
Him a sacrifice, because we bind ourselves by a solemn promise to 
perform a work pleasing to God. 



The Ten Commandments of God. 333 



The Oath. 

Cases sometimes occur in which a man will not believe the word of 
another. But if a witness comes forward and affirms : " That is so, 

1 myself saw it," then the speaker is more readily believed, and all the 
more if the witness in question is known to be a man of honor. Now 
it maj^ occur that a man calls God to witness, that is to say, he 
appeals to the omniscient God to make known the truth of what is 
said by His almighty power. In this case his word will be regarded 
as the word of God. As an official seal gives force to a decree, so the 
oath is the seal God gives us to corroborate a statement. It is a 
coin of high value, stamped with the name of the living God. Our 
Lord took an oath when Caiphas adjured Him by the living God 
to speak the truth. So did Esau, when he confirmed by an oath the 
promise he made to relinquish his birthright for the pottage of 
lentils. 

1. To sweax or take an oath is to call God to witness that one 
is speaking the truth, or that one will keep a promise. 

In swearing, a man calls either upon God or upon something he 
holds sacred. If a man swears by God, he makes use of words such as 
these: As the Lord liveth (Jer. iv. 2); as surely as there is a God 
in heaven, God is my witness (Kom. i. 9) ; may God punish me, etc. 
Or we swear by holy things, such as the holy Gospel, the cross of 
Christ, the Blessed Sacrament. But as these things are incapable 
of attesting anything themselves, or of punishing a deceiver, it is in 
fact equivalent to calling God to witness. Our Lord Himself speaks 
of swearing by the Temple, by heaven, or by the throne of God 
(Matt, xxiii. 21, 22). But to use such expressions as: Upon my word, 
by my honor, as surely as I stand here, etc., is merely emphasizing 
an assertion, not swearing. An oath may be simple or solemn. A 
simple oath is between man and man in ordinary intercourse; a 
solemn oath is taken in a court of law or in presence of official per- 
sonages. (An oath is administered to soldiers and officers of state.) 
In taking a solemn oath one is required to kiss the Holy Scriptures, 
or a crucifix, and to say: So help me God, to intimate that if he de- 
parts from the truth, he renounces the divine assistance and the 
blessings promised in the Gospels. Jews and Mohammedans have 
their own peculiar ceremonial; the latter raise one finger to show 
their belief in one God. 

2. Christians are not obliged to refuse to take an oath, for 
it is permitted by God, and pleasing in His sight. 

If swearing were forbidden Christ would not have made use of an 
oath (Matt. xxvi. 64), nor would God have sworn to Abraham on 
Mount Moriah that He would multiply his seed as the stars in heaven 
and as the sand by the seashore (Gen. xxii. 16) ; nor would St. Paul 
so frequently have taken God to witness in his epistles (Rom. i. 9; 

2 Cor. i. 23). The oath has besides a good object; it serves to put 
an end to disputes (Heb. vi. 16). It is pleasing to God, because by it 
we make public profession of faith in His omnipotence. His justice. 
His omniscience, and thus we honor Him. On this account atheists 



334 The Commandments, 

and social democrats cannot be induced to take an oath. It is God's 
will that we confirm our word with an oath, when necessary (Exod. 
xxii. 11). When Our Lord said: "Let your speech be yea, yea, no, 
no, and that which is over and above these is of evil" (Matt. v. 37), 
He meant to warn the Pharisees against the habit to which they were 
addicted of using idle, unnecessary oaths. Catholics need not refuse 
to take an oath, as some sectaries do; however, no one ought to be 
compelled to do so. Any one who forces a man to swear when he 
knows he will swear falsely, is in some way worse than a murderer; 
for the murderer only kills the body, whereas he who makes another 
swear falsely, causes the death of a soul, nay, of two souls, his 
neighbor's soul and his own also, for he is responsible for the other's 
death. 

3. We ought therefore to make use of an oath only when it 
is absolutely necessary, with deliberation, and in the interests 
of truth and justice. 

When Christ says the oath is of evil (Matt. v. 37), He intends to 
signify that it is occasioned by man's evil tendencies, and that rash 
oaths are sinful. Had mankind not fallen from its original state 
of integrity and justice, there would have been no need for the oath; 
but since faith and fidelity have vanished, recourse has been had to 
it. I^ot until evil prevailed everywhere did swearing become an ordi- 
nary practice ; when by reason of the general perfidy and corruption 
no man's word could be relied on, then God was called to witness. 
St. Augustine compares the oath to a medicine, which must not be 
taken without good reason; it is to a man's words what the crutch 
is to the cripple. Consequently it is wrong to swear heedlessly, about 
trifling matters, as salesmen often do about their wares. Frequent 
swearing is apt to lead to false swearing. " A man that sweareth 
much shall be filled with iniquity, and a scourge shall not depart 
from his house" (Ecclus. xxiii. 12). Wherefore we must make use 
of an oath as seldom as possible, unless it is required of us by the 
Government or in a court of law. Our oath must always be true; 
that is to say, when on our oath, we must always say what we really 
believe to be true, and we must have the intention of keeping our 
word. The Roman general Regulus (250 B.C.) affords a fine instance 
of this. He was taken prisoner in war by the Carthaginians, and 
after being kept six years in captivity, he was sent to Rome to sue for 
peace. Before leaving the Carthaginian camp, a solemn oath was ad- 
ministered to him to return thither, provided the Roraans would not 
conclude peace. On arriving in Rome he informed the Senate of the 
enemy's weakness, and urged them to pursue the war. Then he re- 
turned to prison, although every one in Rome, even the pagan high 
priest, spared no effort to detain him. St. Peter, on the contrary, 
swore falsely in the outer court of the high priest's palace (Matt, 
xxvi. 72). Blessed Thomas More, the High Chancellor of England, 
was thrown into prison by Henry VIIL, because he would not concur 
in the hostile attitude that monarch assumed towards the Catholic 
Church. He might have purchased his release merely by swearing 
to conform to what bis sovereign decreed. He was advised to do this, 
mentally applying the words to God, his supreme Sovereign and 
Lord. But he would tjot consent, saying he dared not swear falsely. 



The Ten Commandments of God. 335 

It is possible, however, that one may swear under a misapprehension, 
or one may he prevented by illness or misadventure, or some other 
sufficient cause, from fulfilling a promise made under an oath; in 
that case no guilt is incurred. Our oath must be premeditated; that 
is, we must consider well beforehand whether our statement is 
strictly true, or whether we shall be able to accomplish what we 
promise. King Herod at the feast swore rashlj^ for he promised with 
an oath to give the damsel who danced before him whatever she should 
ask. At her mother's instigation she asked the head of John the 
Baptist (Mark vi. 23). We read that forty Jews, in their enmity to 
St. Paul, swore neither to eat nor drink until they had killed him 
(Acts xxiii. 12). In the present day Freemasons bind themselves 
by oath not to express any desire to receive the last sacraments 
on their death-bed. Such oaths are sinful, and highly displeasing 
to God. 

4. He who swears falsely, commits a grave act of blasphemy, 
And draws down upon himself the curse of God and the penalty 
of eternal perdition. 

False swearing is also called perjury. He who swears falsely, 
who confirms by oath a statement he knows to be untrue, or who 
swears to do something, although he is conscious that he cannot fulfil 
his promise, is like a man who stamps a forged document with an 
official seal, an act which cannot escape punishment. Swearing 
falsely is a mortal sin, whatever be the subject of the oath. The 
curse of God rests upon the house of him who swears falsely (Zach. 
V. 3). God often punishes false swearers by a speedy and sudden 
death. Sedecias, the King of Judah^ swore fealty to N'abuchodo- 
nosor and broke his covenant. Forthwith God announced to him by 
the lips of the prophet Ezechiel that he should meet with severe 
chastisement and die in Babylon (Ezech. xvii.), and in fact Nabu- 
chodonosor took the king captive, put out his eyes, and brought him 
to Babylon, where he died (4 Kings xxv. 7). Wladislas, King of Hun- 
gary, concluded peace with the Turkish Sultan Murad IL, and con- 
firmed the treaty with an oath, yet he resumed hostilities against 
him. He fell in the battle of Warna (1444) with all the flower of his 
nobility. Perjury is punishable by the law with imprisonment. The 
Emperor Charlemagne made it a law that all who were convicted of 
swearing falsely should have their right hand cut off; later on three 
fingers only of the right hand, wherewith they took the oath, were 
struck off. Rash swearing is at the least a venial sin; it is a bad 
habit, and he who is always ready to confirm every statement, 
whether true or false, by an oath, lives, if he knows the value of his 
words, in a state of mortal sin. If a man has sworn wrongfully, he 
must not keep his oath, but deplore it. That is what Herod ought to 
have done. With regard to breaking an oath, that is to say, the non- 
fulfilment of a promise made under oath, it may be either a venial or 
a mortal sin, according as the matter concerned is weighty or not. 
The same is true of a vow (Suarez). 



336 The Commandments, 



The Vow (Solemn Promise), 

1. A vow is a promise voluntarily made to God, to perform 
some good action. 

The vow is a promise made to God. We call upon God implicitly, 
if not explicitly when we say : My God, I promise that I will do this or 
that. A simple intention is not a vow; no one, not even God Him- 
self, can require anything of us because of it. A vow is a promise 
made of our own free will: no one is bound to make it (Deut. xxiii. 
22), and no one can be compelled to make it. A vow made under 
compulsion is invalid ; not so one made under apprehension of danger, 
or stress of want, for then the act is voluntary. We must only prom- 
ise what will be pleasing to God; not anything wrong, as did Jephte 
who, before going to battle, vowed to the Lord that if he was vic- 
torious, he would offer as a holocaust whosoever should first come out 
of the doors of his house. His only daughter came to meet him, and 
she was sacrificed (Judges xi.). Such a vow is foolish and displeas- 
ing to God (Eccles. v. 3), and ought not to be accomplished. 
Usually something is promised which is not of obligation, a pilgrim- 
age, for instance; but one may also promise something which one is 
otherwise obliged to do, e.g., to observe the fasts of the Church, to 
keep the holydays, to be temperate in eating and drinking. In this 
case failure to keep one's promise is a twofold sin. The owner of a 
factory, whose only child was dangerously ill, promised before God 
if she recovered, that he would never have work done on Sundays 
and holydays. She got well and he kept his word. He was then 
doubly bound to observe the holydays. 

Vows are sometimes accompanied by a condition. 

A kind of bargain is made with God. Jacob promised to give 
tithes of his possessions to God provided He brought him back 
prosperously to his father's house (Gen. xxviii. 20-22). The proces- 
sions on the Kogation days originated through a vow made about the 
year 500 by St. Mamertus, Bishop of Vienna, in time of famine; 
and about a century later the procession on St. Mark's Day was 
instituted in consequence of a vow made by Pope Gregory the Great 
while the plague was raging. The inhabitants of Ober-Ammergau 
pledged themselves to perform the Passion play every ten years in 
1633, at the time of an epidemic. St. Louis of France promised, if 
he recovered from a severe illness, to undertake a crusade (1248). 
In the present day many persons promise, in illness or affliction, to 
visit some place of pilgrimage, to make an offering to some church, 
to give a statue, to fast on certain days, etc. The celebrated sanc- 
tuary of Maria-Zell, which attracts so many pilgrims, is due to a vow 
made before a battle with the Turks by King Louis I. of Hungary, 
(1363). 

2. The most important vows are the religious vows, that is to 
say the solemn promise made voluntarily by persons entering a 
religious Order, to follow the evangelical counsels. 

Poverty, chastity, and obedience, are the three vows taken by 



Tlie Ten Commandments of God, 337 

Keligious. They are very useful, for by them a man entirely gives up 
the world, in order to serve God better. These vows are most pleas- 
ing to God, for those who take them consecrate not only all they do, 
but their ownselves to God. As St. Anselm says, he who gives the 
tree gives more than he who only gives the fruit of the tree. Many 
persons offer oblations to God; a vestment, for instance, candles or 
flowers; but a better, more perfect oblation is to give one's self to 
God. The vows of religion are either solemn (so called because the 
obligations incurred are greater), or simple vows. Solemn vows are 
those in which there is an irrevocable consecration of one's self ac- 
cepted by the Church, on the part of one who takes them. What is 
consecrated to God can never again be employed for secular purposes ; 
with that which is simply dedicated it is otherwise. Thus any one 
who takes the solemn vows is irrevocably consecrated to the service 
of God. The Pope alone can release from solemn vows, and that 
only for weighty reasons. Before taking the solemn vows, i.e., being 
professed, it is necessary to have spent a year in the novitiate, and 
have been under the simple vows for at least three years (Pius IX., 
March 19, 1857). Bishops, or the superior-general of an Order can 
generally release from the simple vows, and for a less grave cause. 

3. A Yow renders the good action which we pledge ourselves 
to perform more acceptable to God. Consequently by means of 
a vow we obtain a more speedy answer to prayer, and make 
more rapid progress in the way of perfection. 

By a vow we prove our fidelity to God. We also make an offering 
to God because we thereby bind ourselves to the performance of a 
good work. Thus, for instance, one who fasts in fulfilment of a vow 
performs a more perfect action than he who fasts without a vow. 
Hence it is that the prayers of those who make vows are more speed- 
ily granted. After the inhabitants of Ober-Ammergau had made the 
promise already mentioned, not one more fell a victim to the pesti- 
lence. The pious Anna made a vow to the Lord, when she prayed 
that a son might be granted to her, and she became the mother of 
the great prophet Samuel (1 Kings i. 11). Why do we see so many 
3X-votos in places of pilgrimage, so many votive offerings in 
churches? Vows enable us to attain more quickly to perfection (St. 
Francis of Sales). We thereby gain strength in the practice of vir- 
tue, because our will is fortified by the vow. The thought: I have 
promised my God to do this, is a powerful incentive to the perform- 
ance of good actions. Many persons of great sanctity have taken 
vows, as a useful restraint to keep themselves in the fear of God. We 
may obtain special graces from God by pledging ourselves to make 
novenas in honor of the saints, to be particularly devout to the 
Mother of God during the month of May or of October, to perform 
certain mortifications or good works. 

4. He who does not keep a solemn promise, offends against 
God; and so does he who needlessly postpones the fulfilment of 
his promise (Exod. xxiii. 21). 

If we are bound to keep our word to our fellow-creatures, how 
much the more ought we to fulfil the promise made to God. " It is 



338 Tiie Commandments. 

inuch better not to vow, than after a vow not to perform the things 
promised" (Eccles. v. 4). The debtor is compelled by the law of 
the land to pay his d^bts, and can it be supposed that he will go scot 
free who withholds from God what is His due? The non-fulfilment 
of a vow may be either a venial or a mortal sin, according to the 
importance of the matter in question. The guilt is doubled, if at the 
same time we transgress a command and show disrespect to God, 
as for instance by violating a vow of chastity. If we are unable to 
fulfil a promise we ai'e exempt from blame, provided we do our 
utmost to perform the thing promised. 

5. Therefore any one who is desirous of taking a vow, ought 
to consider well beforehand whether he will be able to keep his 
word. 

A man who wishes to build, first makes an estimate of the cost, 
to see whether his means will allow him to complete the structure 
(Luke xiv. 28). ISTo one ought to make a promise for his whole life, 
without first testing his ability to keep it. St. Francis of Sales made 
a vow to say the Rosary every day of his life; he often regretted 
having been so hasty in that promise. In any serious matter it is 
advisable to consult an experienced priest. For this reason the 
Church has made the rule that every one who wishes to take the 
vows of religion, should have a twelve months' noviceship. During 
that time he can make up his mind as to whether he has a real 
vocation to the religious life. If he takes the vows without feeling 
certain about his vocation he has only himself to blame. 

6. A Religious who fiinds himself unable to keep his vows 
must apply to his Superior to be released from them or have 
them commuted. 

Our Lord said to His apostles: "Whatsoever you shall loose on 

earth shall be loosed also in heaven" (Matt, xviii. 18). Hence the 
bishop or other superior is authorized to absolve from vows. The 
vow is usually commuted for some good work more conducive to the 
spiritual weal of the individual. There are five vows from which the 
Holy Father alone can dispense : The vow to enter a religious Order ; 
the vow of lifelong chastity ; the vow to visit the tombs of the apostles 
in Rome ; and the vows to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem (the holy 
places) or to Compostella (the tomb of St. James). Under certain 
circumstances the bishop also has power to dispense from these 
vows : If they have been made conditionally ; under some measure of 
compulsion; without mature deliberation, or in ignorance of what 
they involved. In a time of jubilee every confessor has power to 
commute vows for some good work of another nature. One may 
always do more than one has promised : God will not be displeased, 
any more than an ordinary creditor, if He is paid more than what is 
due to Him. 



The Ten Commandments of God, 339 



THE SECOND COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

The Second Commandment is this : " Thou shalt not take the 
name of the Lord thy God in vain ; " that is to say, thou shalt not 
utter it without reverence. By the name of God is not meant the 
mere word alone, but the majesty appertaining to the Most High. 

We owe reverence to almighty God because He is a Lord of 
infinite majesty, and of infinite bounty. 

Reverence is a mixture of fear, love, and esteem. If it was said 
of a monarch that he had many millions of subjects, that he had 
an army of a hundred thousand warriors who could take the field at 
his command, that by a word from his lips he could make the happi- 
ness or misery of multitudes, you would fear that monarch. But if 
you were told of his goodness, his endeavors to promote the welfare of 
his subjects, you would love and esteem him. So will you feel towards 
God, if you contemplate His infinite perfections and His great love 
towards man. Consider the perfections of God! There are upon 
earth some fifteen hundred millions of human beings; each one of 
these God knows, preserves, guides. Pie hears their prayers. He helps 
them in their necessities ; He rewards or punishes them for the most 
part here below. How vast is the knowledge of this supreme Being ! 
Millions of orbs revolve in space; God has created them all. He main- 
tains them all. He gives them all motion. How boundless is His 
power! Think of the unseen world alone, peopled by millions of 
celestial spirits ; He knows each one. He preserves each one in exist- 
ence. He guides and directs each one, and by each and all He is 
adored. How great is His majesty ! " Who is like to Thee among the 
strong, O Lord ? Who is like to Thee, glorious in holiness, ten'ible and 
praiseworthy, doing wonders?" (Exod. xv. 11.) On account of the 
great majesty of God we should fear Him, and should love Him by 
reason of His infinite goodness. Fear and love are the component 
parts of reverence. 

1. In the Second Commandment God commands us in the first 
place to show due respect to His divine majesty. This we must 
do in the following manner: 

We should frequently call upon the name of God with true 
and heartfelt devotion, especially at the commencement of all we 
do and in time of trouble. 

Newton, the great astronomer, had the deepest respect for the 
name of God ; he uncovered his head and bowed low whenever it was 
uttered in his presence. Many devout Christians bow their head 
when they pronounce the name of Jesus in prayer ; the priest does so 
in celebrating Mass. St. Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch, who when a 
child is said to have been he whom Onr Lord set in the midst of the 
disciples, at the time that He said " Whosoever shall humble himself 
as this little child, he is the greater in the kingdom of heaven " 
(Matt, xviii. 4), loved to repeat the name of Jesus; shortly before 
his death he said : " This name shall never leave my lips or be effaced 
from my heart." And, in fact, after his martyrdom, the holy name 



340 The Commandments, 

was found inscribed on his heart. In the Litany of the Holy ITame 
we invoke the name of Jesus again and again, because it is the most 
powerful of all names, and through it we can obtain all we need. " If 
you ask the Father anything in My name. He will give it you" 
(John xvi. 23). By the name of Jesus the apostles and saints worked 
miracles; St. Peter said to the lame man at the gate of the Temple: 
"In the name of Jesus Christ arise and walk" (Acts iii. 6). Christ 
promised that in His name devils should be cast out (Mark xvi. 17). 
The devils tremble at the name of Jesus ; they take flight when they 
hear it, even when it is uttered by evil men, so great is its potency. 
The name of Jesus is also all-powerful to fill the heart with joy; 
it is compared to oil (Cant. i. 2) ; as oil gives light, alleviates pain, 
and affords nourishment, so does the name of Jesus, when we call 
upon it. St. Vincent Ferrer declares it to be a defence in all dangers 
spiritual and temporal, and the means of healing bodily infirmities. 
AH graces are combined in this holy name : " There is no other name 
under heaven given to men, whereby we must be saved " (Acts iv. 12). 
*^ At the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those that are in 
heaven, on earth, and under the earth" (Phil. ii. 10). An indulgence 
of twenty-five days is granted for each invocation of this holy name, 
and a plenary at the hour of death for those who have frequently 
invoked it during life (Clement XIII., Sept. 5, 1759). To pro- 
nounce this name is indispensable for obtaining the indulgence at the 
hour of death. Would that every Christian could say with St. Ber- 
nard : " The name of Jesus is honey to the taste, melody to the ear, 
joy to the heart." !N^o one who clings to mortal sin can devoutly call 
on this name : " l^o man can say the Lord Jesus, but by the Holy 
Ghost" (1 Cor. xii. 3). In beginning every wish, before every action 
however insignificant, we should call on the name of God, or make 
the sign of the cross, with the usual words : " All whatsoever you do, 
in word or in work, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ" 
(Col. iii. 17). Thus we shall merit the divine blessing, and earn a 
reward for every action ; Our Lord promises that any one who gives 
to another a cup of cold water in His name shall not be unrewarded 
(Mark ix. 40). We should also call upon the name of God in the time 
of trouble ; Fie has said : " Call upon Me in the day of trouble, I will 
deliver thee and thou shalt glorify Me" (Ps. xlix. 15). In the year 
1683 the Christians obtained a brilliant victory over the Turks ; their 
battle-cry was the names of Jesus and Mary. In the hour of death 
above all we should breathe the name of Jesus; like St. Stephen 
whose last words were : " Lord Jesus, receive my spirit " (Acts vii. 
58.) 

2. We ought to show respect for all that appertains to divine 
worship ; more especially for the servants of God, for holy places, 
sacred things, and religious ceremonies. 

We ought to show respect for the ministers of God. In this Count 
Eudolph of Hapsburg set an excellent example. One day when out 
hunting he met a priest carrying the Blessed Sacrament to the sick. 
Instantly he dismounted, and offered his horse to the priest. And 
when the latter on his return, gave back the horse to the count, he 
would not take it, saying it must thenceforth be devoted to the 
service of the sanctuary. The priest predicted that good fortune and 



Hie Ten Commandments of God. 341 

happiness would attend his career, and so it did; nine years later 
Rudolph was elected emperor. Our Lord bids us reverence His 
priests; He says: "He that despiseth you, despiseth Me" (Luke x. 
16). " Touch not My anointed " (1 Par. xvi. 22). St. John Chrysostom 
says that the honor shown to the priest is shown to God Himself. 
God also requires us to show respect to holy places and things. When 
He appeared to Moses in the burning bush, and Moses approached 
somewhat near. He said to Him : " Come not nigh hither ; put off 
the shoes from thy feet ; for the place whereon thou standest is holy 
ground" (Exod. iii. 5). Under the Old Dispensation the people 
were strictly forbidden to touch the Ark of the Covenant (Numb, 
iv. 15). "Reverence My sanctuary" (Lev. xxvi. 2). Enter into the 
house of God as if you were entering into heaven, and leave behind 
you all that savors of earth. "Holiness becometh Thy house, 
Lord!" (Ps. xcii. 5.) We should also manifest respect for all relig- 
ious services. St. Elizabeth of Hungary removed her crown from her 
head whenever she heard Mass. Out of respect for the Gospel we 
stand up when it is read, and we preserve a grave demeanor when we 
approach the sacraments. 

3. We ought frequently to praise and magnify almighty God 
on account of His infinite perfections and goodness, especially 
when He reveals His perfections in a special manner, or confers 
a benefit upon us. 

The three children in the fiery furnace sang a canticle of praise 
when God preserved them from being hurt by the flames (Dan. iii.). 
When Tobias recovered his sight, he immediately blessed the Lord 
(Tob. xi. 17). Remember the Magnificat, the song of praise uttered 
by the Mother of God, and the Benedictus, the canticle of thanks- 
giving pronounced by Zacharias on his cure (Luke i.). Whenever 
you receive any favor from God, say: Deo gratias, "Thanks be to 
God," or Glory be to the Father, etc., and frequently repeat the salu- 
tation : " Let Jesus Christ be praised ! " In some parts of Germany and 
Switzerland, this pious greeting takes the place of the good morning, 
or good day, in use among us. And if you are prevented by infirmi- 
ties from praising God with your lips, at any rate praise Him in 
your heart; for God, Who hears not as we hear, requires not audible 
sound ; He reads the heart, and is content with our good will. " Bless 
the Lord, O my soul, and let all that is within me bless His holy 
name. Bless the Lord, my soul, and never forget all He hath 
done for thee" (Ps. cii. 1). "I will bless the Lord at all times; His 
praise shall be always in my mouth " (Ps. xxxiii. 2). " Blessed be the 
name of the Lord, from henceforth now and forever. From the rising 
of the sun unto the going down of the same, the name of the Lord 
is worthy of praise" (Ps. cxii. 2, 3). In praising God, we do the 
best for ourselves, for thereby we draw down upon ourselves the divine 
blessings in great abundance. 

4. Furthermore, God prohibits everything which is a violation 
of the reverence due to His divine majesty; and in particular: 

Taking the name of God in vain. 

Many people have the habit of thoughtlessly exclaiming at every 
trifle that surprises them : " Good Lord ! My God ! " and tho like. 



342 The Commandments, 

It is a bad habit; correct yourselves of it, and endeavor to correct 
others also, as it shows a want of due reverence for the name of God. 
Those who truly love God cannot stand by unmoved and hear His holy 
name profaned. This careless, flippant use of the name of God or 
of any other sacred name is at least a venial sin. " Let not the 
naming of God be usual in thy mouth, for thou shalt not escape free 
from sin" (Ecclus. xxiii. 10). "The Lord will not hold him guilt- 
less that shall take the name of the Lord his God in vain " (Exod. xx. 
7). "We take good care," says St. John Chrysostom, "not to wear 
out our best clothes by putting them on every day; so we must 
beware lest we thoughtlessly utter the name of God, which is worthy 
of our profoundest reverence." The Jews did not venture to pro- 
nounce the word Jehovah ; they always spoke of " The Lord." 

5. Swearing. By this is meant the use of holy names in a 
moment of anger as an imprecation against certain persons or 
things. 

For instance parents, when angry, wish ill to their children, using 
the name of God or of heaven; workmen call down evil on the tools 
they employ. Out of the mouth of a Christian none but blessings 
should proceed (1 Pet. iii. 9). Should the same mouth wherewith we 
pray, wherewith we receive the sacred body of the Lord, be employed 
to curse our neighbor and offend against God ? 

Almighty God often punishes those who curse others by al- 
lowing the curse to be fulfilled. 

St. Augustine speaks of a certain mother who cursed her refrac- 
tory sons, they having gone so far as to strike her. Immediately 
they were seized with a convulsive movement of the limbs, from 
which, after wandering through many lands, they were at length 
cured at Hippo, by touching the relics of St. Stephen. St. Ignatius 
of Loyola once asked an alms of a Spanish nobleman; the latter flew 
into a rage, and said : " May I be burned alive if you are not a rogue 
deserving the hangman's rope." Shortly after, on the occasion of 
festivities to celebrate the birth of an heir to the throne, a barrel of 
gunpowder exploded in the nobleman's house, and he was so severely 
burned that he expired in agony a few days later. Working-people 
who curse and swear over their work, or call down imprecations 
upon the horses they are driving, cannot expect their labor to pros- 
per. Thus God rewards those who use bad language: "He loved 
cursing, and it shall come upon him" (Ps. cviii. 18). 

A man who indulges the bad habit of swearing commits 
many sins, and is in danger of eternal perdition. 

As one tells from the language a stranger speaks of what country 
he is a native, so when oaths flow freely from a man's lips, one may 
conclude he belongs to hell; there is reason to fear that he does not 
belong to the kingdom of God, for he talks the language of hell. The 
Fathers used to consider swearing as a sign of perdition. Those who 
curse shall perish (Ps. xxxvi. 22) ; they shall not possess the kingdom 
of God (1 Cor. vi. 10). Ordinary swearing is a venial sin, provided 
no serious evil is worked to one's neighbor, yet it is a greater sin than 



The Ten Commandments of God. 343 

taking God's name in vain, because not only is it a disrespect towards 
God, but an offence against charity. 

6. Indecorous behavior towards persons who are consecrated 
to the service of God, holy places, sacred objects or actions. 

As we treat a priest, in his priestly capacity, so we treat God 
Himself, for Christ said : " He that despiseth you, despiseth Me '' 
(Luke X. 16). He who abuses or despises a priest is guilty of dis- 
honoring God, and deserves the same chastisement as the Jews who 
abused and despised the Son of God. St. John Chrysostom says the 
want of respect for eccleciastical superiors is the source of all evil. How 
severely the little boys were punished who mocked the prophet 
Eliseus (4 Kings ii. 24). We also offend God by unseemly behavior 
in church, laughing, whispering, staring about, lolling, etc. St. 
Ambrose says of people who behave badly in church that they come 
with small sins and go away with great ones. Insults offered to God 
in His house are more offensive to Him than those offered elsewhere ; 
we ourselves resent most of all rudeness shown to us in our own 
house. This is why the meek and gentle Saviour drove those who 
bought and sold out of the Temple, saying : " My house shall be 
called the house of prayer, but you have made it a den of thieves " 
(Matt. xxi. 13). "If any man violate the Temple of God, him shall 
God destroy " (1 Cor. iii. 17). The same respect is due to holy thing's 
as to holy places. When David was bringing the ark back to Jeru- 
salem, an Israelite named Oza ventured to lay hold of it. God struck 
him and he died (2 Kings vi. 7). King Ozias was punished with 
leprosy, because he entered the sanctuary and wanted to burn in- 
cense (2 Par. xxvi. 21). To disturb religious services or show con- 
tempt for them is also sinful. Of this sin the sons of Heli were 
guilty when they interfered with the Jewish sacrifices (1 Kings ii.). 
In the present day sometimes evil disposed persons interrupt sermons, 
processions, or other services, or insult priests who are taking the 
Blessed Sacrament to the sick. These offenders are punishable by 
law as disturbers of divine worship. 

7. Blasphemy. Of this sin those are guilty who revile God, 
His saints, or speak contemptuously of objects connected with 
His worship. 

The Emperor Julian the Apostate always spoke of the Son of God 
as the Galilean (at that time a word of insult) ; even at his death, 
which was occasioned by the thrust of a lance, he is said to have 
exclaimed : " Thou hast conquered, O Galilean ! " Ungodly persons 
are often heard to utter bitter revilings against God, especially in 
time of suffering and affliction, as if they did not deserve the trials 
He sends them. It is blasphemy to speak scornfully of God, or of 
His actions; or to attribute to a creature what is the prerogative of 
the Creator. The people sinned thus who when King Herod made an 
oration to them, cried : " It is the voice of a god and not of a man " 
(Acts xii. 22). The Jews committed this sin. God says by the mouth 
of the prophet: "My name is continually blasphemed all the day 
long" (Is. Iii. 5). To speak contemptuously of holy places and things 
is a kind of blasphemy, as a reflection upon God, Whom we are told 
to praise in His holy places (Ps. cl. 1). 



344 The Commandments, 

Sacrilege is another kind of blasphemy. This consists in 
putting to an improper and degrading use what pertains to the 
service of God. 

The King of Babylon, Baltassar, committed sacrilege when, in a 
state of inebriation, he commanded the sacred vessels that had been 
taken from the Temple at Jerusalem, where they were used in the 
worship of the true God, to be brought to serve as drinking cups 
at the feast. The mutilation of statues or defacing of crucifixes is a 
sacrilege. Would it not be considered a treasonable act to treat 
the crown or the portrait of an earthly monarch with contumely? 
Again, those who receive the sacraments unworthily, who appropriate 
to themselves Church property, or who commit a theft in church, 
come under the same condemnation. It is said that Jews and Free- 
masons have sometimes obtained consecrated Hosts, which they sub- 
jected to horrible profanation. Such conduct is simply satanic. 

Blasphemy is essentially a diabolical sin, and one of the 
gravest transgressions. 

Blasphemy may be called a sin peculiar to devils and reprobates, 
for as the Holy Spirit speaks by the mouth of the good, so the devil 
speaks by the mouth of the blasphemer (St. Bernardin). The blas- 
phemer is worse than a dog; for a dog does not bite the master who 
is kind to him when he chastises him, whereas the blasphemer reviles 
God, from Whom he has received so many benefits, oblivious of the 
fact that God only afflicts him for his own good. When the saintly 
Bishop Polycarp was offered his life if he would blaspheme Christ, he 
answered : " For eighty-six years I have served Him, and He has 
done me nothing but good; how could I speak evil of my King and 
Master ? " St. Jerome says that all sins are slight in comparison with 
this, for by all others one offends against God indirectly, but by this 
sin one offends against the Most High Himself, not against His 
image. " Whom hast thou blasphemed, against whom hast thou ex- 
alted thy voice? Against the holy One of Israel" (4 Kings xix. 22). 
All other sins arise from himian frailty or ignorance, but blasphemy 
comes from the malice of the human heart (St. Bernard). Other 
sins bring some advantage to the sinner; pride desires to gain im- 
portance, avarice money, intemperance the pleasures of the table, 
but this sin brings a man no profit, no pleasure. The Jews punished 
the blasphemer with death. St. Thomas Aquinas declares blasphemy 
to be a mortal sin, unless it is committed in a hasty moment without 
deliberation. " Oughtest thou not to fear that fire will fall from 
heaven upon thee and consum.e thee, if thou dost venture to asperse 
the name of the Almighty ? Will not the earth open and swallow thee 
up? Deceive not thyself, O man, thou canst not escape the hand of 
an omnipotent God!" (St. Ephrem.) 

God punishes blasphemy with severe chastisements in time, 
and with everlasting damnation hereafter; it is also punishable 
by human law. 

"God is not mocked" (GaL vi. 7). When King Baltassar pro- 



The Ten Commandments of God. 345 

faned the vessels ol the sanctuary, judgment fell upon him imme- 
diately: an unseen hand wrote his fate upon the wall. That same 
night the enemy entered the city; he was slain and his kingdom be- 
came part of the Persian empire (Dan. v.). Sennacherib, the King 
of Assyria, blasphemed God; shortly after he lost two hundred 
thousand men in the war against the Hebrews, and was assassinated 
by his own sons. Michael III., Emperor of Constantinople, made 
public mockery of the sacraments on the feast of the Ascension; at 
night there was a tremendous earthquake, and some time later the 
emperor was murdered. An Israelite cursed God in the wilderness; 
he was put into prison till Moses had ascertained what was God's 
will ; and the Lord said : " Let all the people stone him " (Lev. xxiv. 
14). As a man who throws a stone up to the sky, cannot touch, much 
less injure any of the heavenly bodies, but may break his own head if 
the stone falls back upon it, so blasphemous words do no harm to the 
Being against "Whom they are directed ; they only fall back upon the 
head of him who utters them, to his own perdition. Thus the blas- 
phemer whets the sword to pierce his own heart (St. John Chrysos- 
tom). Our Lord says that whosoever reviles his neighbor shall be in 
danger of hell fire (Matt. v. 22) ; how much more he who reviles God! 
Under the Old Law, when God was not so well known, it was said: 
" He that curseth father or mother shall die the death " (Exod. xxi. 
17). How much more shall judgment overtake those who in this age 
of knowledge and enlightenment, curse, not their parents, but the 
Lord, their God ! " They shall be cursed that shall despise Thee " 
(Tob. xiii. 16). "He that blasphemeth the name of the Lord, dying 
let him die" (Lev. xxiv. 16). Blasphemy is also punished by the 
secular authority. St. Louis of France made it a law that any one 
who blasphemed God should be seared on the lips with a red-hot 
iron. This was done to a wealthy citizen of Paris, with the result 
that before long no blasphemous word was heard in the kingdom. 
St. Jerome on one occasion rebuked an ungodly man for his impious 
words ; when asked why he presumed to do so, he said : " A dog may 
bark in his master's defence, and am I to stand by silent when God's 
holy name is blasphemed? I would sooner die than forbear to speak." 

8. Simony. This consists in selling spiritualities for money, 
or the equivalent of money. 

In the Middle Ages simony was a common sin; bishop's sees and 
benefices were sometimes sold to the highest bidder. It is simony to 
offer a priest money for absolution, to sell relics, to charge a higher 
price for objects, such as crosses and rosaries, because they have been 
blessed. This sin takes its name from Simon the magician, who 
offered the apostles money when he saw that by the imposition of 
hands the Holy Ghost was given, saying : " Give me also this power, 
that on whomsoever I shall lay my hands, he may receive the Holy 
Ghost" (Acts viii. 19). He who is p-uilty of the sin of simony is 
excommunicated ; to him the words of St. Paul apply : " Thy money 
perish with thee, because thou hast thought that the gift of God 
may be purchased with money" (Acts viii. 20). To give money for 
Masses is, however, not simony; it is much the same as giving some 
one an alms and asking for his prayers. "Nor is the payment of fees 
to the parish priest for the exercise ^i his ministerial functions to 



346 The Commandments, 

be reckoned as simony, because these fees are not a price paid for 
the discharge of spiritual duties, but a contribution towards the 
maintenance of the priest. Otherwise St. Paul would not have 
written these words : " They who work in the holy place eat the things 
that are of the holy place, and they that serve the altar partake with 
the altar; so also the Lord ordained that they who preach the Gospel 
should live by the Gospel" (1 Cor. ix. 13, 14). 

The object of the Confraternity of the Holy Face is to make 
reparation for blasphemies and irreverences committed against 
God. 

It is well known that Our Lord miraculously imprinted His sacred 
countenance upon the cloth handed to Him by Veronica on the 
way to Calvary. The Emperor Tiberius, when sick, had this cloth 
brought to Rome, and the mere sight of it sufficed to cure him. 
Veronica is said to have given it to St. Clement, the fellow- 
worker with St. Peter, and his successors in the see of Rome. 
Thus it came to St. Peter's, where it is yet preserved. In 1849, at 
Christmas, it was exposed, and for three hours it was surrounded 
by a halo of brilliant light. This cloth still bears the impression of 
Our Lord's features ; they are distinctly discernible, and show how He 
was maltreated by the barbarous soldiery. In fact, this image affords 
striking evidence of the irreverence of man towards God. The sight 
of it inspires us with pious horror and heartfelt contrition. For a 
long time no copy was permitted to be made of it ; this is no longer 
the case, and the prints of it are now venerated, God making known 
by miracles and speedy answers to prayer, how highly He approves 
of this devotion. At Alicante, in Spain, after a long period of 
drought, a picture of the Holy Face was carried in procession ; a tear 
was seen to roll from the eyes of the picture, and in a few days rain 
fell abundantly. In Tours a large number of cures were effected in 
presence of a picture of the Holy Face, and it was there, by means of 
the exertions of the pious M. Dupont, that the Confraternity of the 
Holy Face was instituted, its object being to make atonement for 
sins of blasphemy. In the revelations of St. Gertrude we read that 
Our Lord said to her : " Those who venerate the image of My 
humanity (My human countcnnncs) shall be interiorly enlightened 
by the radiance of My Godhead." And to Sister Saint Pierre, in 
1845, He said : " As one can purchase whatever one will with a coin 
of the realm, stamped with the king's head, so those who adore My 
countenance will obtain all they desire." Again : " The more you 
seek to efface from My countenance the marks of disfigurement 
caused by blasphemers, the more I will restore your soul, defaced by 
sin, to its original beauty, so that it may appear as if it just came 
from the waters of Baptism." 

THE THIRD C0MMA:N'DMENT OF GOD. 

On Mount Sinai almighty God spoke, and said : " Remember that 
thou keep holy the Sabbath day. Six days shalt thou labor and do all 
thy work " (Exod. xx. 8, 9). The Third Commandment thus contains 



The Ten Commandments of God, 347 

two injunctions, the command to sanctify the Sunday, and the com- 
mand to work. 

In the Third Commandment of the Decalogue God commands 
us to sanctify the Sunday and to work six days in the week. 

1. THE PRECEPT TO SANCTIFY SUNDAYS AND 
HOLYDAYS. 

In order that amid the many cares and anxieties of life man may 
not forget God, his final end and high calling, God has enjoined 
upon him to keep one day in the week holy. As we have certain 
times set apart for the satisfaction of our bodily necessities, sleeping, 
eating and drinking, so we have appointed times for meditation upon 
the eternal truths whereby we may obtain fresh strength for our 
souls. On holydays we have the opportunity of expiating by prayer 
what we have done amiss, and of rendering to God the thanks due 
to Him for the benefits He has conferred on us during the week. 

1. God commands us to sanctify the seventh day, because on 
the seventh day He rested from the work of creation. 

In his account of the creation Moses says : " God blessed the sev- 
enth day and sanctified it, because in it He had rested from all His 
work " (Gen. ii. 3). Man, who is made after the image of God, ought 
to follow the example of the Lord his God ; as God ceased from work 
on the seventh day, so man ought to rest after six days' labor. Man 
needs this rest after working for six days. Just as one is obliged 
to sleep for six or seven hours after the work of the day is done, in 
order to recruit one's bodily powers, so one needs a longer period of 
rest after six days of labor. At the time of the French revolution, 
the observance of the seventh day was done away with and the tenth 
day appointed for the day of rest; but it was soon found indispen- 
sable to return to the old order of things. The number seven belongs 
to the natural order. God, Who set the lights in the firmament of 
heaven for signs and for seasons and for days and for years (Gen, 
i. 14), intended the changes of the moon, which occur every seven 
days, to point out to us the division of time into periods of seven 
days, of which one was to be a day of rest. Bishop Theophilus of 
Antioch, writing about the year 150 a.d., mentions the observance 
of the seventh day as a universal custom. We who are Christians 
keep the Sunday, the Jews keep Saturday, the Mohammedans keep 
Friday, the Mongols keep Thursday, the black population of Guinea 
and Goa keep Tuesday and Monday respectively. The cessation 
from labor every seventh day foreshadows our eternal rest in heaven 
(Heb. iv. 9). By solemnizing the day of the Lord we renew and 
quicken our longing for the unending festival of joy above. The very 
fact that we wear our best apparel on that daj^ serves to remind us of 
the celestial happiness that we hope will one day be our portion. 

2. God commanded the Jews to keep holy the Sabbath day. 

The Sabbath was a joyous festival for the Jewish people, because 
on that day they were delivered from Egyptian bondage. In addition 
to this, when God gave the law from Mount Sinai, He enjoined upon 



348 The Commandments. 

them to sanctify the day by cessation from work: " The seventh day 
is the Sabbath; thou shalt do no work on it" (Exod. xx. 10). The 
Sabbath was specially suited to be set apart for the public worship 
of God, because more than any other day it recalled God's benefits 
to His people (Ezech. xx. 12). It was, moreover, typical of the rest 
in the sepulchre of the future Messias. The Jews were extremely 
strict in their observance of the Sabbath ; any profanation of the day 
was punished with death, no work of any kind might be done on it. 
A man found gathering a few sticks on the Sabbath day was stoned 
(Numb. XV. 36). The Pharisees would not allow that it was lawful 
to do a good deed on the Sabbath (Matt. xii. 12). ISTo manna fell in 
the desert on that day. 

3. Sunday was appointed by the apostles as the day of rest 
Instead of the Sabbath, because Christ rose from the dead on 
a Sunday. 

Sunday is a festival of the Holy Trinity; for on the first day 
of the week God the Father began the work of creation, God the Son 
rose from the dead, and God the Holy Ghost descended upon the 
apostles. The apostles were authorized to transfer the day of rest 
from Saturday to Sunday, because it was not so much the observance 
of the Sabbath, as the observance of a fixed day in each week upon 
which God insisted in the commandment. They were all the more at 
liberty to change the day, as the Old Law was but a shadow of the 
]N'ew. Sunday is called the Lord's Day, because it ought to be devoted 
to His service, because on it He rose from the dead. St. Justin (139 
A.D.) is the first to make use of the word Sunday : it is a name befit- 
ting the day whereon the Lord, like the rising sun, rose from the 
grave in the brilliance of His glorified humanity. On this day also 
God made the lig*ht; the Holy Ghost came down in tongues of fire, 
and on this day we receive spiritual enlightenment. The Emperor 
Constantine the Great enjoined the observance of Sunday as a day of 
rest throughout the Roman empire; and Charlemagne caused those 
who violated it to be fined. 

4. We are bound on Sunday to abstain from servile work and 
to assist at the public Mass; we ought, moreover, to employ this 
day in providing for the salvation of our soul, that is to say by 
approaching the sacraments, by prayer, hearing sermons, reading 
spiritual books, and performing works of mercy. 

Servile work is that which entails severe physical exertion, and is 
exhausting to the bodily strength. It is the work generally done by 
servants, menials, artisans, and laborers; in a word the work belong- 
ing to the class that serves, hence the name. Markets and all com- 
mercial transactions are included in the prohibition ; yet in deference 
to local customs, the rule is relaxed in some countries. However. 
buying and selling must not be carried on during the hours of divine- 
worship. As God rested on the seventh day, so we ought to rest. As 
Christ on Easter Sunday left the grave-clothes in the sepulchre and 
rose triumphant, so we ought to lay aside our earthly business, and 
on the pinions of prayer soar aloft to God. Physical repose is neces- 
sary, because it is impossible for one who is greatly fatigued to pray 



Tlie Ten Commandments of God. 349 

well. Public worship is the holy sacrifice of the Mass, generally ac- 
companied by a sermon. In the first centuries of Christianity the 
Christiaiis were accustomed to assemble on Sundays to hear Mass, 
and a sliort exhortation was delivered after the Gospel, as is usual 
in the present day. There is no act of Christian worship that can 
compare in dignity and value with the holy sacrifice of the Mass. 
On Sunday we ought to provide for the interests of our soul ; physical 
rest is ordained in order that we may labor more diligently for our 
spiritual welfare; and we must not content ourselves with putting on 
better clothes, but must cleanse and adorn our hearts. The cessation 
from the work of the week gives an opportunity to the faithful, in 
compliance with the mind of the Church, to approach the sacraments. 
They are encouraged to receive holy communion on Sundays and 
holydays, and to give themselves to prayer ; for this reason afternoon 
services are held, and the churches stand open for private devotions. 
Our forefathers used to read spiritual books, homilies on the Gospel 
for the day, and the lives of the saints. Many of Our Lord's mir- 
acles of healing were wrought on the Sabbath day — Vvitness the man 
whose hand was withered (Matt. xii. 10) ; the man born blind (John 
ix.) ; the man that had dropsy (Luke xiv. 2) — although by doing so 
He gave great offence to the Jews. He intended to teach us to do 
good work on Sundays. 

The work permitted on holydays of obligation is (1), Servile 
work which is absolutely necessary, especially works of mercy; 
(2), Light and trifling work; (3), Occupations of an intellectual 
nature; (4), Reasonable recreation. 

We are not forbidden to do work that is absolutely necessary. 
Our Lord does not desire man to suffer on account of the Sunday 
rest, for He says: " The Sabbath was made for man, and not man for 
the Sabbath " (Mark ii. 27). All work may be done which is required 
for the support of life; we may have our food prepared, and are 
allowed to gather in cur crops if the weather threatens their destruc- 
tion. All work that is indispensable for the public service may be 
carried on : e.g., the postal service, the railroad, telegraph, and police 
service. Ecclesiastical authorities have the power to grant special 
permission for servile work to be done on Sunday, if there is suffi- 
cient reason. Christ says : " The Son of man is the Lord of the Sab- 
bath also," and the Church, His representative, can say the same. 
And as the chief and primary object for which Sunday is instituted 
is to promote the spiritual welfare and eternal salvation of mankind, 
all works tending to this end are enjoined upon us. Our Lord says: 
" The priests in the Temple break the Sabbath and are without 
blame" (Matt. xii. 5). Works of mercy are also enjoined; nothing 
is more profitable to salvation than these, for on them our eternal 
fate depends (Matt. xxv. 35). We have Christ's example and pre- 
cept also for the performance of charitable works on Sunday: "It is 
lawful to do a good deed on the Sabbath day" (Luke xii. 12), Some 
^f the saints used to visit the hospitals after Mass, and spend the re 
mainder of Sunday in serving the sick. Yet it must be remembered 
that only such servile work as is absolutely necessary is permitted, 
although its object be a charitable one. For if it is lawful to do all 



350 The Commandments. 

servile work without distinction which was for the benefit of the poor, 
all artisans and laborers might go on with their work, and that would 
be by no means permissible (Suarez). JSTecessary works of mercy 
exempt from the obligation of attendance at public worship ; they are 
in themselves an act of worship (Jas. i. 27). Our Lord says: "I will 
have mercy and not sacrifice" (Matt. ix. 13). But if it is in any 
way possible public worship should not be omitted. " These things 
you ought to have done, and not leave those undone" (Matt, xxiii. 
23). What is it right to do if a conflagration breaks out just before 
the time of Mass, or if there is an inundation? Occupations of an 
unimportant kind may be engaged in, God does not require us to sit 
idle on Sundays; besides writing, music, and all mental employ- 
ments are lawful. Sunday is also instituted as a day of rest; on it 
we may freely enjoy innocent diversions. 

- Sins Against the Third Commandment. 

The precept enjoining upoii us to sanctify the Sunday is 
transgressed : 

1. By doing or requiring others to perform servile work. 

The Christian ought to allow his servants and even his cattle, to 
rest on the Sunday (Exod. xx. 10). Servants, apprentices, and all 
who are in a subordinate position, ought not to remain in a situation 
where they cannot fulfil their religious obligations. Servile work is 
a mortal sin, if it be done for more than two or three hours on 
Sunday without urgent necessity. Yet hard work, if done for a 
shorter time, or light work for the same time, is not mortal sin; nor 
is it so if a not very valid reason is counted on as an excuse, nor 
again if a servant does what his master, without cogent grounds, 
requires of him, through fear of evil consequences to himself. In the 
latter case the sin rests with the master. If scandal is given by doing 
servile work, even for a short time, it is a grievous sin. Our Lord 
says of one who gives scandal, " it were better for him that a mill- 
stone should be hanged about his neck, and that he should be drowned 
in the depths of the sea " (Matt, xviii. 6). God threatened the Jews 
most emphatically, saying that any one who profaned the Sabbath 
should be put to death: "He that shall do any work in it, his soul 
shall perish out of the midst of his people " (Exod. xxxi. 14). 

2. By carelessness about attendance at public worship. 

Entertainments given on Saturday are often the cause why 
Catholics omit Mass on Sunday. " What folly," exclaims St. Francis 
of Sales, " to turn day into night and night into day, and neglect 
one's duties for frivolous amusements ! " 

3. By indulging in diversions which are over-fatiguing, or 
which are of a sinful nature. 

Games which involve much physical exertion, hunting, dancing, 
etc., ought to be avoided on Sunday; also those which lead to any- 
thing unseemly; brawls, extravagant expenditure, disinclination for 
work. Worse still, if the amusements are sinful in themselves; for 
whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin (John viii. 34), and 



The Ten Commandments of God. 351 

thus servile work of the most degrading description is done. Woe 
to him who chooses the day which is consecrated to divine service 
to offend against God and injure his own soul most deeply. Some 
people take advantage of the day of rest to indulge more freely in 
vice. Xot unfrequently the devil leaves people in peace all the week, 
and when Sunday comes he tempts them to all manner of sin, pride 
and ostentation in dress, gambling, dancing, excess in eating and 
drinking. In the present day men seem to thirds most of eating and 
drinking on the Lord's Day, women of adorning their person. How 
lamentable is the depravity of mankind, in thus abusing the most 
sacred institutions! On Sunday the devil of avarice is cast out, 
but it is as if seven other and worse devils entered in its place; 
the love of the world and all it entails; the frequenting of convivial 
scenes, disseverance of the ties of family life, squandering of sav- 
ings, and dislike of work. " It is far better," St. Augustine says, 
" that one should occupy one's self wdth needle-work or field-work on 
Sunday than indulge in vice." To spend the Lord's Day in worldly 
vanities amounts to a kind of sacrilege ; to desecrate it by sin is worse 
than plundering the sanctuary. 



Motives for the Sanctification of Sunday. 

1. God rewards with temporal blessings those who keep 
holy His day. 

Consider the loving kindness of God ; it is no toilsome service He 
requires of you, but that you should rest. There are one hundred and 
sixty-eight hours in the week. God only demands one day (twenty- 
four hours) for Himself ; must you use this for your worldly affairs ? 
Those who would prosper in their business must consecrate Sunday to 
the service of God. Christopher Columbus, the discoverer of America, 
when on his voyage always kept his vessels stationary on Sunday. God 
often protects in a special manner those who keep holy His day. One 
of the sailors on board a steamer on the Mississippi refused to shift 
the cargo — an unnecessary work — on Sunday; he was dismissed in 
consequence. Shortly after the boiler burst and several of the crew lost 
their lives ; thus the God-fearing sailor escaped. God often increases 
the gains of those who abstain from the pursuit of their calling on 
Sundays. A pious friend once persuaded an artisan to desist from 
working on Sunday, saying he would compensate for the loss thus 
occasioned. In six months' time he returned, and the artisan 
acknowledged that far from losing, he had made more money than 
usual in the interval. Holy Scripture says " God blessed the sev- 
enth day" (Gen. ii. 3), that is to say, He made it productive of 
blessing for us It is a false argument to allege that the suspension 
of work on Sunday is prejudicial to the produce of manufactures, 
for it is an ascertained fact that factory hands do more and better 
work if they have one day of rest in the seven. A bow never un- 
spanned loses its elasticity; so the workman loses his powers if they 
are ever on the stretch. Rousseau, no friend to religion, used to say 
that holidays were essential to the welfare of a nation. In England 
the observance of Sunday is a strict rule, and see how her commerce 



352 The Commandments, 

has prospered. Some Jews still rigorously keep tbe Sabbath, and no 
disadvantages ensue to them. 

2. The profanation of the Lord's Day is frequently punished 
with temporal evils, sickness and poverty. 

Because the Jews habitually violated the sanctity of the Sabbath 
God permitted ISTabuchodonosor to destroy Jerusalem and take the 
people into captivity (2 Esd. xiii. 18). The usual punishment for 
profaning Sunday and not hearing Mass is to become the captive 
of vice. Those who work continuously ruin their health ; man can no 
more live without taking repose than without eating. Thus the day 
of rest is not only a religious duty, but a natural necessity. To those 
who work on Sundays God says as to the Jews of yore: "I will 
quickly visit you with poverty" (Lev. xxvi. 16). Those who through 
greed of gain desecrate Sunday, obtain the very opposite of their 
aim. The Chinese have no fixed day of rest, and to what a deplorable 
state of degradation and misery, both physically and morally, they 
have sunk as a nation! 

3. The non-observance of Sunday undermines family life 
and social relations. 

This sin causes the disintegration of the family. If the members 
of a family neglect public worship, they lose all sense of their duties 
and fall into evil ways. The father becomes dissolute, the mother 
indifferent, the children insubordinate. The father does not fulfil 
his duty to his children; occupied all the week he sees but little of 
them; on Sunday he has leisure to observe their individual charac- 
ters, and give them useful instruction. The disintegration of 
society follows that of the family; the profanation of Sunday is an 
open violation of God's law; the yoke of the secular law is next 
thrown off; no respect is shown to the authority of the king, the 
bishop, the legislator, the parent. Catholics who are careless in 
regard to the holydays of obligation, gradually lose all sense of their 
religious duties; they forget God, their final end, and become like 
heathen. Those who are not found on Sunday among the children of 
God on earth, will be excluded from His presence to all eternity. By 
sanctifying Sunday, we lay up for ourselves treasures which will last 
forever. 

2. THE PRECEPT OF LABOR. 

Work may be either bodily or mental. 

It must not be thought that by those who work, only servants, 
artisans, operatives, and the like are intended; students, priests, 
schoolmasters, doctors, etc., are included under the term. The latter 
do not indeed work with their hands, but with their h^ad; and 
mental work is far more difficult and fatiguing than physical exer- 
tion. 

Work was formerly held to be degrading, until it was 
sanctified by Our Lord. 



The Ten Commandments of God. 353 

Among the pagans there were two classes of people : the upper or 
governing class, and the slaves, the working class. In some states 
artisans were deprived of civil rights. As work was regarded as a 
degradation, men used either to join the army, or spend their days 
in idleness. At Our Lord's coming He gave dignity to labor by His 
example; He chose a carpenter for His foster-father, and from an 
early age He worked Himself. In the parable of the laborers in the 
vineyard He gave His hearers to understand that work was necessary 
for salvation (Matt. xx.). Many eminent men have not disdained 
to engage in manual labor. St. Paul earned his own living by the 
work of his hands (Acts xx. 34), he was a tent-maker (Acts xviii. 3). 
The monks of old times occupied themselves with agriculture, and 
in transcribing manuscripts. Work is no humiliation; on the con- 
trary, it is greatly to a man's credit to maintain himself by his own 
exertions (Leo XIII.) . Vice and pride alone really degrade a man. 
He who serves his fellow-man because it is the will of God, really 
serves God Who lays the obligation upon him. Christ Himself did 
not come to be served, but to serve. He who is the servant of another 
man is more to be respected than he who is the slave of his passions. 

1. The obligation to work was laid upon mankind by God 
after the Fall as a penance. 

Previous to the Fall of our first parents work was only a relaxa- 
tion for man. But after the Fall God said to Adam : " In the sweat 
of thy face thou shalt eat bread, until thou return to the earth out 
of which thou wert taken " (Gen. iii. 19). 

2. Every individual who can work is bound to work. St. Paul 
says : " If any man will not work, neither let him eat " (2 Thess. 
iii. 10). 

No man is free from original sin, and on account of original sin 
we are obliged to do penance, thus all must work. In order to com- 
pel man to work, God has ordained that the earth shall not afford 
him nourishment unless it is cultivated. If no one labored all the 
people on the earth would die of hunger. The rich are not exempt 
from this obligation; they can give the proceeds of their work in 
charity, or at least devote them to some good object. Royal per- 
sonages have often worked costly vestments for the Church; queens 
and princesses used to spend a great part of their time in this 
manner. Upon a rich man being once asked why he was always 
working at something or other, though there was no need for him 
to do so, he replied : " Do you think almighty God has given me my 
hands for no purpose ? " St. Benedict, in making the rule for his 
monks, provided that they should be occupied alternately with 
prayer and work. Nothing but old age, bodily infirmities, and sick- 
ness exempt from this universal law. "Man is born to labor and 
the bird to fly" (Job v. 7). Even the lower animals teach us in this 
respect; witness the industrious ant (Prov. vi. 6). "We exhort you 
to work with your own hands, as we commanded you " (1 Thess. iv. 
11). 

3. Every man is bound primarily to perform the work apper- 
taining to his calling or station. 



354 The Commandments^ 

There are various grades or states of life in human society; there 
are ecclesiastics, physicians, lawyers, soldiers, married people and 
unmarried; human society is like a body, each member of which has 
its own individual functions (1 Cor. xii. 12), or like a clock, in which 
all the wheels, large and small, work into one another. It is God Him- 
self Who calls every man to his special state, hence we speak of it as 
his " vocation," and God gives every one the graces necessary to his 
calling. Thus if a man feels inwardly drawn to one particular state, 
he ought to obey this attraction, just as the migratory birds obey the 
motion that teaches them to seek a warmer clime in the autumn. 
Those who do not follow that interior impulse, but force themselves 
to embrace a calling for which they feel no inclination, too often 
share the fate of the birds who do not journey southwards; like them 
they do not thrive. Parents ought not to compel their children to 
enter a profession for which they have no attraction. As our voca- 
tion comes from God, in fulfilling its obligations we serve Him; 
consequently the duties of our state ought to take precedence of all 
others. In some cases we have to leave God for God. The object 
for which Christ came into the world was to redeem it, and when the 
time came for Him to fulfil the duties of that vocation everything 
else was made subservient to it. Remember His words in the Temple 
when He was twelve years of age (Luke ii. 49), and how He neglected 
to take food, while conversing with the Samaritan at Jacob's well 
(John iv. 34). So Moses acted; when God told him on Mount Sin^ 
that the people had sinned grievously, he immediately left converse 
with God, and returned to the camp (Exod. xxxii. 7). 

Careful fulfilment of the duties of one's calling leads to 
perfection; the neglect of them entails fatal consequences both 
in time and in eternity. 

Those who conscientiously accomplish the duties of their calling 
are conscientious in all things. Like the principal wheel in a ma- 
chine, if this goes well, all else goes well ; but if it stops, the whole of 
the works are at a standstill. In the process for canonization, the first 
inquiry is how the candidate has fulfilled the duties of his calling. 
It is a mistake to imagine that time and trouble devoted to the 
duties of one's calling are wasted ; on the contrary, there is no speedier 
means of attaining perfection. Those who, deluded by the devil, 
neglect their duties for prayer and pious works commit sin. "If a 
man," says St. Francis of Sales, " does not perform the grave obli- 
gations of his state, though he raise the dead and practise all manner 
of austerities he is in mortal sin and will perish eternally." In vain 
those pray who will not work; all piety is false which is not sub- 
ordinated to the claims of our calling, for no state of life, if lawful, 
is a hindrance to salvation. 

4. We must not forget God in what we do ; before and duiing 
our work we should implore His aid and renew our intention. 

God's blessing we need if our work should succeed. Witness the 
miraculous draught of fishes (Luke v.). Three men with God's blessing 
will do more work in a day than ten without it. To begin one's work 
without prayer is as if a soldier went to battle without weapons. St. 



TJie Ten Commandments of God, 355 

Paul exhorts us to renew our good intention in the words : " Whether 
you eat or drink, or whatsoever else you do, do all to the glory of 
God" (1 Cor. X. 31). In all our actions we must take aim, like one 
who shoots at a mark. However long a row of ciphers a child makes 
on a slate, they have no value whatsoever until a figure is placed 
before them. So it is with our works : in themselves they are worthless, 
but if they are performed in God's name. He makes them fruitful and 
meritorious. And as when writing one dips one's pen from time to 
time in the ink in order to write on, so we ought to look up to God 
to gain fresh strength for our work. We should do like the mariner, 
who looks up at the stars or consults the compass that he may steer 
his course aright. The angels, while ministering to man, do not 
cease to gaze upon the countenance of God. As the builder con- 
stantly uses square and plumb-line, so all our actions should be 
measured by the rule of the love of God. "Pray without ceasing" 
(1 Thess. V. 17). Accustom yourselves to utter ejaculatory prayers 
at your work and take for your motto the words: Ova et Idbora. 
Work and pray ; and while putting your hand to your work, raise your 
heart to God. 

5. Labor obtains a temporal and an eternal recompense, be- 
cause it is a kind of divine worship. The temporal recompense 
is contentment and earthly happiness. 

As the law of work was laid upon Adam in paradise by God as 
an expiation of his fault, when he had acknowledged and con- 
fessed it, all who work do the will of God, and perform an act that 
is pleasing to Him. Work in its character of penance, is more excel- 
lent than prayer. St. Francis of Sales, when obliged to curtail his 
prayers because of the press of business, excused himself by saying: 
" In this world we must pray by work and action." Work has a bitter 
root, but the fruit it bears is sweet. It has a temporal reward: the 
idler finds his time long and is a burden to himself, whereas the 
industrious is contented and cheerful. He experiences the truth 
of Our Lord's words : " My yoke is sweet and My burden is light '^ 
(Matt. xi. 30). The devil cannot molest the busy man with his temp- 
tations ; he has no leisure to listen to his enticements, any more than 
a man will leave some important transaction to go where music and 
dancing are going on. Work generally insures earthly prosperity. 
The bees who gather honey all day long in summer, lay up in their 
hives a store of nourishment for the winter. The industrious man's 
future is assured. A Roman who had accumulated a large fortune 
by hard work was accused of magic arts. Being brought before the 
Senate, he produced his tools and said: "Behold the charms I have 
made use of. The sweat of my brow I cannot show you." Finally 
labor, like all other acts of penance, merits an everlasting reward. 
Our Lord says : " The laborer is worthy of his hire " (Luke x. 7). And 
St. Paul : " Every man shall receive his own reward according to his 
labor" (1 Cor. iii. 8). The anticipation of a reward sweetens labor, 
as we see is the case with all the working classes. They labor for 
a temporal reward, but we for an eternal. St. Bernard told a monk 
who was always busily employed, that if he continued to work so 
zealously he need not dread purgatory. Let us not in our work look 
so much to what we shall gain by it in time, as to our eternal reward. 



356 The Commandments, 

For if we only think of present profit we shall work less well, and we 
shall lose the eternal profit to which we show ourselves indifferent. 

Tlie precept of labor is transgressed: 

1. By indulging in idleness. 

2. By the non-fulfilment of the duties of our station and 
calling. 

3. By omitting to offer to God the work that is done. 

The Relaxations Permitted vo the Christian. 

1. It is lawful for those who work to seek relaxation, for 
this is a means of renewing one's strength after one's work is 
done. 

The bow never unspanned will break; and the man who works 
without cessation will become unfit for work. Social convivialities 
are productive of much good; they promote charity and concord. It 
is God's will that we should enjoy recreation; He has provided us 
with pleasures in nature alone; the beauteous coloring, the delicious 
perfume of the flowers ; the song of birds, the various kinds of fruit, 
etc. Our Lord Himself was a guest at banquets, even at a marriage 
feast, and He speaks without disapproval of music, etc. (Luke xv. 25). 

2. We must not, however, indulge too freely in amusements, 
and certainly we must eschew all those that are sinful; more- 
over in all our recreations the thought of God must be present 
to our mind. 

We must not be too great votaries of pleasure, for diversions are 
not the object of life, they are only a means of renewing our 
strength after our work. Life is for work, not for play. Excess in 
everything is harmful; medicine taken in too large doses is in- 
jurious, and the best condiments, if too freely used, spoil a 
dish. So it is with amusements; they are only to be enjoyed when 
all our duties have been duly performed. The thought of death is a 
useful check upon indulgence in the pleasures of the senses ; if we re- 
member that at any moment our soul may be required of us, we shall 
be moderate in our use of enjojonents. An exaggerated love of 
pleasure and craving for excitement prevails in the present day; one 
festivity and dissipation follows another, and yet everywhere one 
hears complaints of the evil times. May not the thirst for enjoyment 
be the cause? Above all, dangerous or sinful pleasures are to be 
avoided, such as gambling for high stakes, games of chance which 
are prohibited, slandering the absent, sarcastic speeches, unseemly 
words, or contempt of holy things. Those who indulge in such 
pleasures are like thankless children who delight in offending their 
father. When enjoying innocent pleasures we should think of God, 
and our high destiny. The Psalmist says : "Be glad in the Lord" 
(Ps. xxxi. 11). St. Charles Borromeo is said once to have played a 
game of billiards; when asked what he would do if he was told the 



The Ten Comma yidments of God, 367 

Last Judgment was at hand, he replied : " I should finish the game, for 
I am playing for the glory of God, and He is present to my thoughts." 



THE SIX COMMANDMENTS OF THE CHURCH. 

1. The six precepts of the Church are an amplification of the 
Third Commandment of the Decalogue. 

The first precept of the Church enjoins upon the faithful 
to rest from work on certain days besides the Sunday, to give 
thanks to God for special graces. 

The second precept of the Church ordains the manner in 
which the fasting-days and days of abstinence are to be ob- 
served. 

The third and fourth precepts of the Church oblige us to con- 
fess and communicate at least once a year. 

The fifth precept bids us support our pastors. 

The sixth forbids us to marry non-Catholics, or to solemnize 
marriage at forbidden times. 

2. We are under a rigorous obligation to keep the command- 
ments of the Church, for disobedience to the Church is disobedi- 
ence to Christ. 

Christ has conferred upon the Church the same powers which He 
Himself received from His Father ; He said to His apostles : " As the 
Father hath sent Me, I also send you" (John xx. 21). When the 
Church enjoins anything upon us, it is the same as if Christ enjoined 
it ; for He said : " Whatsoever you shall bind upon earth shall be 
bound also in heaven" (Matt, xviii. 18). In disobeying the Church 
we disobey Christ ; as He told the apostles : " He that despiseth you, 
despiseth Me" (Luke x. 16). Our Lord speaks of the Church as a 
kingdom ; He also compares it to a fold, to teach us that the children 
of the Church must obey their ecclesiastical superiors. Every 
society is authorized to make laws which the members must observe ; 
this the Church does; and by her mouth God makes His will known 
to us. 

He therefore who wantonly violates one of the Church's 
laws, commits a grievous sin. 

Our Lord expressly says that he who will not hear the Church 
is to be regarded as a heathen (Matt, xviii. 17). Under the Old 
Dispensation death was the punishment of one who through pride 
should refuse to obey the commandment of the high priest (Deut. 
xvii. 12). Thus we see that from the first rebellion against the 
spiritual authority was a heinous sin. 

3. The rulers of the Church are empowered to dispense the 
faithful from the observance of any of the commandments of the 
Church for weighty reasons. 



358 T%e Commandments* 

Christ said to the apostles : " What you loose upon earth shall be 
loosed also in heaven" (Matt, xviii. 18). Some bishops permit meat 
to be eaten on Friday when a festival falls on that day. The Pope 
has sanctioned the transference of certain holydays to the following 
Sunday in some countries. 

1. THE FIRST COMMANDMENT OF THE CHURCH: 
THE OBSERVANCE OF SUNDAYS AND HOLYDAYS. 

1. In the first commandment of the Church the solemn ob- 
servance of the holydays is enjoined upon us. There are seven 
festivals of Our Lord, five of Our Lady, and three of the saints. 

The early Christians kept a great number of festivals in order to 
keep alive the memory of certain events or benefits received from God 
as the anniversaries came round. These feasts were instituted that 
the events they commemorate might be remembered to all time by 
the faithful, and praise and thanksgiving be rendered to God for 
them. Unhappily some persons only mark these festivals by pro- 
viding a more liberal table, as if, St. Jerome remarks, by eating 
and drinking one could honor those who sought to please God by 
fasting and mortification. 

The seven feasts of Our Lord are (1), Christmas (Dec. 25th); 
(2), The Circumcision (Jan. 1st) ; (3), The Epiphany (Jan. 6th) ; 
(4), Easter; (5), The Ascension; (6), Pentecost; (Y), Corpus 
Christi (the third and the last are not holydays in the United 
States). 

As the nativity and the resurrection of Our Lord and the coming 
of the Holy Ghost are events of primary importance, they are cele- 
brated with peculiar solemnity. In European countries the 26th of 
December, the feast of St. Stephen, and the two days immediately 
following Easter Day and Pentecost, are kept as feasts of devotion. 

The five feasts of the Mother of God are: (1), The Immacu- 
late Conception (Dec. 8th) ; (2), The E'ativity of Our Lady (Sept. 
8th); (3), The Annunciation (March 25thy; (4), The Purifica- 
tion (Feb. 2d); (5), The Assumption (Aug. 15th). Of these festi- 
vals the Immaculate Conception and the Assumption are the 
only ones now observed as holydays of obligation. 

The life of the Mother of God is so intimately connected with that 
of her divine Son that the Church commemorates its principal events. 
Unlike the other saints, who are commemorated on the day of their 
death, because it was their birth to a better life, the day of Mary's 
birth is solemnized, because she was born without sin. 

The three festivals of the saints are: (1) The feast of St 
Stephen (Dec. 26th), no longer a holyday of obligation; (2), 
The feast of St. Peter and St. Paul (June 29th), not a holyday 
in the United States; (3), The feast of All Saints (Nov. 'ist). 
In some lands the feast of the patron saint of the country is 



The Ten Commandments of God. 359 

kept as a general holiday. These festivals are either fixed or 
movable. The former are kept yearly on the same day, the 
latter vary as to the date of celebration. 

The fixed festivals are: The Immaculate Conception, Christmas, 
the Circumcision, the Epiphany, the Annunciation, St. Peter and 
St. Paul, the Assumption of and Nativity of Our Lady, the 
feast of All Saints. The movable feasts are: Easter, which is 
kept on the first Sunday following the first full moon after the spring 
equinox, consequently in the interval between the twenty-second of 
March and the twenty-fifth of April ; the Ascension, forty days after 
Easter ; Pentecost, fifty days after Easter ; Corpus Christi, the Thurs- 
day of the second week after Whitsunday. The Church has insti- 
tuted some of her festivals as substitutes for the feasts of the Old 
Testament, which were a foreshadowing of the Christian festivals. 
Others take the place of heathen festivities ; the birth of Our Lord is 
comniemorated in the season when the pagans consecrated the long 
winter nights to the worship of the sun; the processions in different 
countries on Candlemas Day is a Christianized form of the torch- 
light processions held in the first days of February, when the days 
begin perceptibly to lengthen, in honor of the divinities of the 
ancients. This the Church did in order to render the evangelization 
of the heathen more easy, by changing, instead of abrogating, their 
ceremonies. 

2. The holydays of obligation ought to be kept in the same 
manner as the Sundays; we must abstain from servile work and 
assist at holy Mass. 

The number of holydays of obligation varies in different coun- 
tries. In some certain festivals have been transferred to the Sunday 
following, as it was found that holydays recurring too frequently 
produced the opposite effect to that for which they were instituted. 

Tlie Ecclesiastical Year, 

The Jews of old used to observe a number of feasts besides the 
Sabbath in commemoration of important events in their history; 
e.g., the festival of Easter in memory of the exit from Egypt; Pente- 
cost, in memory of the giving of the law on Sinai ; the feast of Taber- 
nacles in memory of their journey through the desert. The Church 
does much the same ; she annually recalls events in Our Lord's life on 
earth, representing them as vividly as is possible after so long a lapse 
of time. This is especially the case in the ceremonies of Holy Week. 

1. The ecclesiastical year is an annual commemoration and 
representation of the life of Christ, and of the time before and 
after His birth. 

The Church places these events before us in order that we may 
meditate upon them and imitate Our Lord's life. In Advent we are 
called upon to anticipate with the patriarchs of the Old Testament, 
the coming of the long-expected Redeemer; at Christmas v/e rejoice 
with the shepherds at His birth; in Lent we fast forty days with 
Christ; at Easter we rise again with Him; at Pentecost we join with 



360 The Commandments, 

the disciples in praying for the coming of the Holy Ghost. On almost 
every day of the year the Church commemorates one or more of the 
saints; they are like planets, revolving around the Sun of justice. 
She bids us consider their lives, how they imitated Christ, and thus 
became patterns of Christian perfection; and she desires to encourage 
us to imitate Him too. It is besides the intention of the Church 
that we should implore the intercession of the saints, that we may the 
more surely be made partakers of the merits of Christ. Finally by 
weaving these saints' days into the cycle of the ecclesiastical year, 
she would teach us amid all our earthly occupations to keep our 
thoughts fixed upon God, doing all, as the Apostle exhorts us, to His 
glory (1 Cor. x. 31). 

2. The ecclesiastical year begins upon the first Sunday in Ad- 
vent; its three principal feasts are: Christmas, when the birth 
of Christ is celebrated; Easter, the day of His resurrection; and 
Pentecost, when the coming of the Holy Spirit is commemorated. 

Thus the ecclesiastical year sets forth the glory of the Holy 
Trinity; it displays the charity of the Father, Who sent His Son into 
the world; the charity of the Son, Who died for our sakes, and the 
charity of the Holy Spirit, Who descended to abide with us. There- 
fore the first Sunday after Pentecost is dedicated to the Holy 
Trinity ; this feast links all the other three together. 

Each of these three great feasts has a season of preparation 
preceding it as well as a subsequent commemoration. 

Advent is the season of preparation before Christmas. In 
the subsequent period we have the feast of the Circumcision, the 
Epiphany, the Purification, and the Sundays after the Epiphany, 

The four weeks of Advent represent the four thousand years 
during which the coming of the Messias was expected. The Im- 
maculate Conception occurs most suitably in Advent, the eighth 
of December, for at the birth of Christ the Sun of justice rose upon 
the world, dispelling the darkness of sin and ignorance; Mary was 
like the aurora (Cant. vi. 9), heralding the coming day. The period 
after Christmas is symbolical of the youth of Our Lord, and of the 
time which intervened before His entry upon His public ministry; 
His hidden life, that is, at Nazareth. 

The forty days of Lent are the preparation for Easter; and 
the Paschal time lasts during the subsequent forty days before 
the ascension. 

The preparation for Lent includes the three Sundays called re- 
spectively Septuagesima (70), Sexagesima (60), and Quinquagesima 
(50). They were so named because in the early days of Christianity 
many communities began the fast fifty, sixty, or seventy days before 
Easter, in order not to have to fast every day of the forty. The Wed- 
nesday after Quinquagesima is called Ash Wednesday, because of the 
ceremony of sprinkling ashes upon the foreheads of the faithful. On 
Ash Wednesday the season of Lent commences; it is forty-six days 
before Easter; thus the number of days is completed without the six 



The Ten Commandments of God, 361 

Sundays, on which we do not fast. During Lent the public life of 
Our Lord is set before us, His previous fast, His Passion and death. 
The forty days which intervene before the ascension represent the 
forty days He spent on earth after His resurrection. The three days 
before the ascension are the Rogation days; on these processions are 
held. 

The ten days after the ascension are the period of preparation 
for Pentecost. The subsequent commemoration lasts for twenty- 
four weeks, sometimes even longer. 

The ten days before Pentecost represent the ten days during 
which the apostles awaited the coming of the Holy Spirit; the weeks 
that follow represent the time that shall elapse before the Last Judg- 
ment. Consequently on the last Sunday after Pentecost the Gospel 
read in church is that which foretells Our Lord's coming as our 
Judge. The feasts of All Saints and All Souls close the ecclesiastical 
year. This is to signify that we are in unbroken communion with 
the blessed in heaven and the holy souls in purgatory and that our 
separation from them is but temporary. All Souls' Day occurs suit- 
ably when the face of nature presents an image of death. 

3. The aspect of nature corresponds to the three principal fes- 
tivals. 

In Advent, at least for us who inhabit the northern hemisphere, 
the nights are longer than the days, and the life of vegetation is at 
a standstill; so it was in the spiritual order before the coming of 
Christ. After Christmas the days begin to lengthen; just so the 
birth of Christ brought light to the world. At Easter nature awa- 
kens to new life and decks herself with verdure ; Christ rises glorious 
from the dead. At Pentecost trees and meadows are in their full 
beauty of leaf and blossom; with the coming of the Holy Spirit a 
fresh era commences for mankind, and fair flowers of holiness are 
brought forth. 

The epistles and gospels, as well as the hymns and sequences 
of the Mass, are suited to the festivals and seasons of the ecclesi- 
astical year. 

The gospels are portions taken from the four gospels, and the 
epistles from other parts of Holy Scripture. They were originally 
compiled by St. Jerome. 



2. TEE SECOND COMMANDMENT OF THE CHURCH. 

By the second commandment of the Church the precept of fast- 
ing and of abstinence is laid upon us. 

Fasting and abstaining are very ancient. Even in paradise it was 
enjoined upon man to abstain from the fruit of one tree: moreover, 
certain meats were forbidden to the Jews; pork, for instance (Lev. 
xi.). On the day of Propitiation the Jews were not permitted to taste 
food for twenty-four hours. Our Lord fasted forty daysj so did 



362 The Commandments. 

Moses and Elias before Him J and St. John Baptist, the Precursor, 
fasted most rigorously. The Church has good reasons for laying 
similar obligations upon the faithful. 

The laws of the Church in regard to fasting and abstinence 
are in reality very strict; they have, however, been largely re- 
laxed by the bishops to suit the exigencies of time and place. 

These laws were originally so stringent that on the fast days not 
only was abstinence from flesh-meat enjoined, but milk, eggs, and 
butter were also prohibited); and no food was to be taken before sun- 
down. But owing to the increase of constitutional weakness, and still 
more because of the spread of religious indifference in the course of 
centuries, the rule has been more and more relaxed. Bishops are em- 
powered to prescribe, each for his own diocese, on what days meat is 
permitted. Hence the rule varies in different dioceses, and it is well 
to attend carefully to the regulations of one's own diocese published 
at the beginning of each Lent. 

There are three divisions of the present law : (1) Abstinence 
alone; (2) Fast and abstinence combined; (3) Fast alone 

In the second commandment of the Church we are ordered to 
abstain on all Fridays of the year; to fast and abstain on Ash 
Wednesday, on the Fridays and Saturdays of Lent, on the Ember 
days; on the vigils of certain feasts; and to fast on all the other 
days of Lent. 

1. We are forbidden to eat meat on Friday, because on that 
day Our Lord died for us. 

Not only is meat prohibited, but all dishes in the preparation of 
which it enters. Fish, turtle, and shell-fish may be eaten, also eggs, 
milk, and butter, in almost all countries. The Church has forbidden 
the use of meat because Christ sacrificed His flesh for us ; also because 
meat is an article of food easily dispensed with, and yet what men 
generally like best. Another reason is to remind us that the lusts of 
the flesh are to be resisted (Gal. v. 19), and these are fostered by 
eating meat. Some people quote Our Lord's words : "Not those things 
which go into the mouth defile the man" (Matt. xv. 11), as opposed to 
this prohibition; but He also said: "The things that come from the 
heart, those things defile the man" (Matt. xv. 18). Disobedience to the 
Church comes from the heart, and this it is which defiles, not the 
actual meat. If a holyday of obligation falls on a Friday, meat is 
allowed, because Our Lord would not have us abstain at a time of 
rejoicing (Matt. ix. 15). 

In early ages the use of meat was also forbidden on Satur- 
days. 

The original object of this prohibition was to suppress the observ- 
ance of the Sabbath day, which still lingered among Christian con- 
verts. It is now done away with; yet Christians often impose some 
restriction upon their amusements on iSaturday, in view of better 
sanctifying the morrow. 



The Ten Commandments of God. 363 

2. Dnring the forty days of Lent only one full meal is to be 
taken, as a partial imitation of Our Lord's fast of forty days, 
and as a suitable preparation for celebrating the festival of Easter. 

The forty days of Lent begin on Ash Wednesday, and last 
until Holy Saturday noon; the Sundays alone are not fasting 
days. 

The Lenten fast was instituted by the apostles in commemoration 
of Our Lord's fast in the wilderness (Matt. iv.). It is a time of 
penance and of sorrow for sin ; hence violet vestments are worn at the 
altar. It is natural to fast when we are in grief (Matt. ix. 15). We 
ought also during Lent to meditate upon Our Lord's Passion, which 
is commemorated in Holy Week, and which usually forms the theme 
of the Lenten sermons. By fasting and meditation upon Our Lord's 
Passion we most readily awake within ourselves the grace of contrition 
and consciousness of sin. The forty days of Lent are also a preparation 
for the Easter festival. In early times the fast was much more rigor- 
ous; the primitive Christians ate no meat all the time, and did not 
break their fast until the evening. Even in the Middle Ages meat was 
prohibited; those who ate it were not admitted to the paschal com- 
munion (Council of Toledo, 653). Those who broke this law were 
punished by the secular authority on the ground of contempt for 
religion. The rule of fasting is made very easy nowadays. All that 
the Church requires of us is to take only one full meal in the course 
of the day; a slight refection is permitted in the morning, besides the 
evening collation. The principal meal may be taken in the evening 
and the collation at noon, or vice versa. Eating between meals is for- 
bidden, but drinking is allowed provided it is not nourishing. No one 
is required to keep the fast of Lent who has not attained the age of 
twenty-one years or who has begun the sixtieth year. 

3. We must likewise fast and abstain on the Ember days, in 
order to implore almighty God to send us good priests, and to thank 
Him for the benefits received during the past quarter. 

The Ember days are three in number, Wednesday, Friday, 
and Saturday, at the commencement of each quarter (quatuor 
tempora) ; these are the usual seasons for ordination to the 
priesthood. 

The Ember days of the winter season fall in the third week of 
Advent, of the spring quarter in the second week of Lent; in summer 
in Whitsunweek and in autumn in the third week in September. The 
Jews were accustomed to fast four times a year (Zach. viii. 19). 
Christ enjoined upon us the duty of praying for good priests, in the 
words: "The harvest indeed is great, but the laborers are few. Pray 
ye therefore the Lord of the harvest that He send forth laborers into 
His han-est" (Matt. ix. 37, 38). 

4. We are also bound to fast and abstain on the vigils of cer- 
tain feasts, in order the better to prepare ourselves for celebrating 
those feasts. 



364 The Commandments, 

The better our preparation, the more abundant are the graces we 
obtain on the feast itself. The early Christians were accustamed to 
assemble together on the eves of gxeat festivals, to pass the night in 
watching and prayer, and in assisting at the holy sacrifice of the 
Mass. This they did because had they held the services in the day- 
time, they would have been liable to disturbance on the part of the 
pagans. Our Lord Himself used often to pass whole nights in prayer 
(Luke vi. 12). When at a later period the attendance at the nightly 
services fell off, and inconveniences arose, the Popes judged it ad- 
visable to transfer the celebration of the vigil to the daytime. The 
vigil of Christmas is the only one in which the nightly celebration 
has been retained up to the present time; of all the others nothing- 
survives but the past. 

These vigils are the days preceding the four great festivals of 
Christmas, Pentecost, the Assumption and All Saints' Day. 

5. It is by no means the desire of the Church that we should 
fast to the injury of our health, or that we should thereby be 
hindered from performing the duties of our station. 

1. Consequently the following persons are permitted to eat 
meat on Friday or other days of abstinence : 

1. The sick, the weak, those who are recovering from illness for 
whom a conscientious doctor orders meat diet; 2. Those whose health 
requires meat diet, or who cannot perform their duties without it; 
3. The poor who live on the food given them; 4. Servants, boarders, 
travellers, soldiers and sailors, who can get no other than meat diet. 
Servants and boarders must, however, try to find another place, where 
they can keep the laws of the Church. It is allowed to take fish at the 
same meal when meat is permitted. 

If you are in doubt as to your obligation of fasting or abstaining, 
ask your pastor or confessor. He can dispense for good reason, and 
will tell you what to do. 

In the United States the following customs prevail: On every day 
of Lent except Wednesdays, Fridays, Ember Saturday and Holy 
Saturday forenoon, meat is allowed once a day to those bound to fast; 
persons not bound to fast may eat meat on those days as often as they 
wish. Most of the bishops grant a dispensation to laboring classes 
and their families on all days of fast or abstinence of the year except 
Fridays, Ash Wednesday, Wednesday in Holy Week, Holy Saturday 
forenoon and the vigil of Christmas. When any member of such a 
family lawfully uses that privilege, all the other members of the house- 
hold may avail themselves of it also, but those who are bound to fast 
may not eat meat more than once a day. 

2. The follovnng are dispensed from fasting (i. e., from 
taking only one full meal a day) : 

1. The sick, the weak, and those who are recovering from illness; 
2. Those who do hard work and cannot, if they fast, fulfill the duties 
of their state of life; 3. Those who are too poor to buy strengthening 
food for their chief meal ; 4. Those who are under twenty-one or who 
have passed their fifty-ninth year. 



Tlie Ten Commandments of God* 365 

Young people who have not done growing require more than one 
full meal a day; of invalids we have already spoken. In the class 
who are engaged in active and laborious work, we include those who 
exert themselves for the temporal or spiritual welfare of their 
fellow-men, such as confessors, preachers, catechists, schoolmasters, 
nurses, physicians, magistrates, etc., who frequently require to take 
something to sustain their strength. When the influenza was so 
prevalent, a general dispensation from fasting was granted. The 
command to keep ourselves in health is given by God, and is a law of 
our nature; whereas the precept of fasting is laid on us by the 
Church; and the law of God is paramount above the law of the 
Church. Those who cannot fast should substitute for it some other 
good work. Confessors have ordinarily power to dispense from 
fasting, and impose some other good work, prayers or alms, in its 
place. 

3. No one ought to carry fasting to an excess, for what God 
requires from us is our reasonable service (Rom. xii. 1). 

He who overdoes fasting is like a coachman who whips his horses 
into a gallop, and runs the risk of upsetting the carriage; or like an 
overladen vessel, that is easily capsized. Even some of the saints went 
to an excess in fasting, and afterwards much regretted it. No one 
ought to venture to do more than the rule prescribes, without the 
advice of his confessor. Obedience is far better than self-willed 
piety. As a rule it is preferable to be temperate every day of the 
week than to fast rigorously on one or two days. Fasting is intended 
to destroy the evil lusts of the body, not the body itself. We must 
deal, with our bodies as a parent deals with his child; he does not 
chastise him when he is docile, but when he is disobedient. Fasting, 
like medicine, must be used in moderation or it becomes injurious. 

6. Fasting is beneficial both for the soul and the body. 

The intellectual powers are sharpened by moderation in our food. 
At Nabuchodonosor's court Daniel ate pulse and drank water, and he 
surpassed in understanding, knowledge, and wisdom all the wise men 
of the kingdom (Dan. i.). By fasting the soul is fortified and 
enabled both to bring the body into subjection (1 Cor. ix. 27), and 
to overcome the temptations of the devil. The fortress surrenders 
when the garrison is starved out ; so the body, under stress of hunger, 
yields to the will and the understanding. Our bodies have to be tamed 
like wild animals. The devil regards the flesh as his best ally; he 
knows that the enemy at a man^s fireside can do him the worst and 
the greatest harm. By fasting we put our foe in irons, so that he 
cannot wage war against us. The bird of prey loves a fat prize, he 
does not make the half-starved one his victim. The athlete who " re- 
fraineth himself in all things" (1 Cor. ix. 25), in preparation for 
the contest, is most likely to conquer. A high degree of virtue is also 
acquired by means of fasting. It inclines man to prayer; it helps 
him to overcome himself, to be gentle, patient, and chaste; it makes 
him resemble the angels, who neither oat nor drink. In the same pro- 
portion that the animal part of our nature is lessened, our spiritual 
nature is invigorated; like the scales of a balance, as one goes down 



366 The Commandments, 

the other rises. Our health is improved and our life prolonged by 
abstemiousness. It is the parent of good health. The hermits in the 
Theban desert fasted rigorously and they lived to be a hundred years 
old. Hippocrates, the father of medicine, reached the age of one hun- 
dred and forty years; this he attributed to the fact that he never 
fully satisfied his appetite. The Wise Man says : " He that is tem- 
perate shall prolong his life " (Ecclus. xxxvii. 34) ; " a moderate 
man also enjoys wholesome and sound sleep" (Ecclus. xxxi. 24). By 
fasting we obtain from God the pardon of our sins; witness the 
!Nrinivites when they fasted; by it we also work off some of our pur- 
gatory. God hears and answers the prayers of those who fast; He 
heard the prayers of the centurion, who fasted until the ninth hour 
(Acts X. 30), and sent an angel to him. When Holof ernes laid si^e 
to Bethulia, the inhabitants betook themselves to prayer and fasting, 
and they were delivered in a marvellous manner by Judith. St. Aug- 
ustine calls fasting and almsgiving the two pinions of prayer. Fasting 
is a means of earning extraordinary graces, for God has ever been 
wont to recompense it with singular favors. After Moses had fasted, 
he was admitted to the honor of conversing with God upon Sinai. 
After Elias' long fast, God appeared to him upon Mount Horeb (3 
Kings xix.). He who fasts, grows more and more spiritual; he is in a 
measure divinized, hence God vouchsafes to hold intercourse with 
him (Rodriguez). Fasting is rewarded after death. Moses and Elias 
were present at Our Lord's transfiguration, because they alone of all 
the patriarchs had fasted forty days as He did. Hence we see that 
glory is reserved in a future life for those who fast in this world. In 
the Preface for Lent the Church sings : " Who by a bodily fast re- 
strainest vices, upliftest our minds, and grantest strength and re- 
wards." 

Y. Abstinence from food is only pleasing to God if, at the 
same time, we refrain from sin and perform good works. 

Fasting is not in itself an excellent thing (1 Cor. viii. 8), but only 
as a means whereby the suppression of our vices and the practice of 
virtue is facilitated. How does it profit a man if he abstains from 
meat, and by his calumnies destroys his neighbor's reputation ? Such 
a one may be compared to a whited sepulchre, outwardly beautiful, 
but foul within (Matt, xxiii. 27). The devil does not eat, yet he is 
unceasingly employed in doing evil. Fasting without prayer is like 
a lamp without oil, because we only fast to pray better. Fasting 
without almsgiving is a field without seed; it fosters the weeds of 
avarice. He fasts for himself, not for God, who does not give to the 
poor what he denies to himself. 



S, THE THIRD AND FOURTH COMMANDMENTS OF 
THE CHURCH. 

1. In the third and fourth commandments the Church enjoins 
upon us the duty of approaching the Sacrament of Penance and 
receiving holy communion at Easter. 



The Ten Commandments of God. 367 

Holy communion ought to be received often, because it is the 
food of the soul. That soul will be starved which for a long time 
does not receive this nourishment. Our Lord says : " Except you eat 
the flesh of the Son of man, and drink His blood, you shall not have 
life in you" (John vi. 54). The early Christians used originally to 
receive holy communion every day; later on only on the three great 
feasts, Christmas, Easter, and Pentecost. And when in the Middle 
Ages the fervor of many grew cold, the Council of Lateran (1215), 
ordained that all Christians who were capable of distinguishing good 
from evil were obliged to confess their sins at least once a year, and 
at Easter, at the least, devoutly to receive the Sacrament of the 
Altar, The Council of Trent expresses the wish that the confession 
also should be made at Easter, for it says : " Throughout the whole 
Church the salutary custom prevails of making confession of sin 
during the holy and most suitable season of Lent; a custom which 
the Church approves and accepts as pious and most certainly to be 
retained" (14 C. 5). Holy communion should be preceded by confes- 
sion, lest any man should approach holy communion in a state of mor- 
tal sin ; the Easter communion is no exception to this rule. The obli- 
gation of the Easter precept is not fulfilled by a sacrilegious commun- 
ion, nor by an invalid confession. Although the Church only re- 
quires every Christian to confess his sins once a year, yet it need 
hardly be said that if any man has the misfortune to fall into mortal 
sin, he should go to confession without delay. 

2. The time for fulfilling ihe Easter precept is only two 
weeks, from Palm Sunday to Low Sunday; however, 'bishops 
may extend it from the fourth Sunday of Lent to Trinity 
Sunday, 

3. It is fitting that we should receive holy communion at 
Easter, because it was just before Easter Day, on Holy Thursday, 
that Our Lord instituted the Adorable Sacrament of the Altar. 

At Easter Christ also rose from the dead. If we make a really 
good confession, we, in a spiritual sense, rise from the dead. Eor 
the soul which is in mortal sin is spiritually dead ; through the Sacra- 
ment of Penance it receives the Holy Spirit again, and spiritual life 
is again restored to it. At the grave of the risen Redeemer the angel 
said to the women : " Why seek you the living with the dead ? He is 
not here, He is risen." Would that our guardian angel could say the 
same of us, when the devil, after Easter, thinks to find us still sleep- 
ing in the sepulchre of sin. "You seek the living with the dead, 
the converted with the sinners ; he is not here." " As Christ is risen 
from the dead, so we may also walk in newness of life " (Rom. vi. 4). 

4. The Church allows Catholics to make their Easter confes- 
sion elsewhere than in their parish church. 

The Church is aware that some find it easier to disclose the 
wounds of their soul to a stranger, nnd she permits this in order to 
prevent such persons from approaching the sacraments unworthily. 
Formerly every one was bound to go to his parish priest as a mark of 
respect. 



368 The Commandments, 

5. Christian burial can be denied to a Catholic who has not 
been in the habit of receiving the sacraments at Easter, and 
who dies unrepentant. 

This is done in the case of one whose neglect of his duty is pub- 
licly known, and who has been admonished in vain by his pastor. 
Before refusing Christian burial, the priest is bound to refer the 
matter to the bishop ; and if time does not allow of this, he takes the 
most lenient course. 

^. THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT OF THE CHURCH. 

By the fifth commandment of the Church we are bound to con- 
tribute to the support of our pastors. 

5. THE SIXTH COMMANDMENT OF THE CHURCH, 
Marriage and the penitential seasons. 

In the sixth commandment marriage with non-Catholics is for- 
bidden, also the marriage of those who are related by blood (con- 
sanguinity) to the third degree inclusive, or by marriage (aifinity) 
to the second degree inclusive. Marriages are not to be solemnized 
during fixed seasons. These penitential times are from the begin- 
ning of Advent until Christmas Day, and from Ash Wednesday 
until Easter Sunday. 

This rule was made "by the Council of Trent (Council of Trent, 
24, 10). Formerly the prohibition also included the period between 
the Monday of Rogation week until the first Sunday after Pente- 
cost ; in some countries at the present time it applies to the Rogation 
days and all fasts throughout the year. Advent and Lent are seasons 
of penance and sorrow for sin, and festivities ill accord with sorrow. 
Moreover in Advent the Church proposes the mystery of the Incar- 
nation, and in Lent the mystery of the redemption for our medita- 
tion, and it would be unseemly to divert our minds from these 
solemn subjects by worldly amusements. The bishop can give per- 
mission for marriages to be contracted privately during these times; 
for their public solemnization the authorization of the Holy See is 
necessary. Concerts are not forbidden, but dances are. Those who 
transgress this command expose themselves to the judgment God 
threatens by the prophet: "I will turn your feasts into mourning" 
Amos viii. 10). 

THE FOURTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

In the Fourth Commandment God enjoins upon us to honor His 
representatives upon earth, that is to say, our parents, and both 
the ecclesiastical and secular authorities. 

1. OUR DUTY TOWARDS OUR PARENTS. 

1. Our parents are to be honored, because they are God's repre- 
sentatives and our greatest benefactors. 



The Ten Commandments of God, 369 

We are all children of Our Father in heaven, and He causes us 
to be fed and brought up by our earthly parents. Thus parents 
take the place of God in regard to the education of their children; 
they are His representatives, and as such, the honor due to Him 
must be paid to them, for the viceroy can claim the same respect as 
the monarch who has delegated his authority to him. Those who 
despise their parents, despise God Himself. St. Augustine, after his 
conversion, bitterly regretted the disrespect he had shown the mother 
God had given to him, knowing that thereby he had shown dis- 
respect to God. Our parents are moreover our greatest benefac- 
tors. " How much," exclaims St. Ambrose, " has not thy mother 
suffered on thy account ! How many sleepless nights, how many pri- 
vations, how much anxiety has she not borne for thee ! How hard thy 
father has worked, to provide thee with food and raiment! And 
canst thou be ungrateful to those who have done and suffered so 
much for thee ? " The Son of God Himself honored His Mother and 
His foster-father; it is said of Him that He was subject to them. 
Learn of Him to obey your parents; He honored them, though they 
were His servants; He loved and respected His Mother, whose 
Creator He was; He never forgot that as an infant He had lain on 
Mary's bosom, and had been carried in Joseph's arms. 

2. We ought to honor our parents by respectful behavior, love, 
and obedience. 

When God bids us honor our parents. He commands us to love 
and obey them, for this is included in the reverence we owe them. 
Love is due to them as our greatest benefactors. It is the first duty 
of a Christian to compensate his parents for the trouble and the sacri- 
fices his education has entailed on them. The obligation to obey 
them ceases when there is no longer occasion for it; the duty of 
loving and respecting them only ends with their life. 

Respect towards our parents consists in esteeming them from 
our heart as God's representatives, and manifesting this esteem 
outwardly by word and deed. 

Esteem for oui' parents must be heartfelt, otherwise outward man- 
ifestations of esteem would be mere dissembling. Christ showed 
great respect for His Mother at the marriage feast of Cana; for 
although He told her His hour for working miracles was not yet 
come, He complied with her request. We must honor our parents 
even if they are poor and in a humble class of life. Joseph, when 
Governor of Egypt showed great respect for his aged father. Al- 
though he was only a shepherd, he brought him to the king and 
presented him before him (Gen. xlvii. 7). King Solomon rose from 
his throne to meet his mother, although she was not of royal lineage ; 
he bowed to her, and made her sit on his right hand (3 Kings ii. 
19). Pope Benedict XL received his mother, who was a poor washer- 
woman, in the kindest manner when she went to him in the mean 
apparel of her class. Even if parents do not lead a virtuous life, they 
still have a claim upon the respect of their children, because of the 
position they hold in regard to them as God's representatives. The 
Wise Man says: "Honor thy father in word and work and in all 
patience" (Ecclus. iii. 9). 



370 The Commandments. 

Love of our parents consists in kind feelings and kind actions 
towards them. 

We are bound to love our parents, as we are bound to love all men, 
because they are our neighbor, made in God's image. But this is not 
enough : They have a right to a special affection on our part, because 
we are their children, because they love us so tenderly, and confer so 
many benefits upon us. Are not his parents a child's best friends? 
Love consists in kind sentiments and kind actions. Joseph showed 
his affection for his old father; he fell on his neck and embracing 
him, wept (Gen. xlvi. 29). But kind feelings are not enough. Let 
us not love in word nor in tongue, but in deed and in truth (1 John 
iii. 18). Therefore we ought to help our parents in destitution or 
sickness, and pray for them. The Prussian General Ziethen when a 
page, was once on guard at night in the king's antechamber. The 
king, Frederick I., finding he did not answer his summons, went out 
and found him asleep over a letter which he was writing to his 
mother, to send her his first earnings (thirty shillings) in the royal 
service. The king read the letter and was so touched that he put a 
roll of money in each of the young man's pockets, and the next morn- 
ing appointed him to the army. When Blessed Thomas More had 
been put to death for the faith by order of Henry VIIL, no one ven- 
tured to bury his remains; his daughter Margaret alone braved the 
tyrant's wrath, and he, respecting her filial devotion, allowed no one 
to interfere with her. Even among the lower animals we find 
examples of affection towards parents. The young lions share their 
prey with the old, and the storks warm those who have lost their 
plumage through age; they bring them food and assist them to fly. 
The Wise Man says : " Son, support the old age of thy father " 
(Ecclus. iii. 18). Remember how Our Lord on the cross provided for 
His Mother by commending her to the care of St. John (John xix. 
26). 

Obedience towards our parents consists in fulfilling all their 
lawful commands, as long as we are under their authority. 

"Children, obey your parents in all things" (Col. iii. 20). Just 
as parents are bound to provide for the education of their children, 
so it is the duty of children to obey their parents. As in the State 
some rule and others obey, so it must be in the family; otherwise 
there can be no domestic order and concord. Virtue is expected of 
the old; submission of the young. Yet children are only bound to 
obey when the command is just; if their parents order them to do 
what is contrary to God's law, and consequently unjust, they must act 
on the Apostle's words : " We ought to obey God rather than men " 
(Acts V. 29). St. Hermengild, son of Leovigild, King of the Goths, 
was imprisoned by his father in a tower in Sevilla, because he would 
not embrace the Arian heresy. The king promised to restore him 
to his favor if only he complied with his desire. But the saint re- 
plied that he would renounce the crown, his father's affection, life 
itself, rather than deny his faith. He was accordingly martyred. 
Several other saints chose rather to disobey the command of their 
earthly than of their heavenly Father, and thus lost their lives. Par- 
ents who require their children to do what is forbidden by the law 



Hie Ten Commandments of God, 371 

of God, undermine their own authority; they saw off the bough on 
which they are sitting. A man ordered his son to work in the fields 
on Sunday; the lad refused, saying it was forbidden by the law of 
God. The father rejoined angrily : " You are not a child now, and 
the commandments are only for children." " In that case," the son 
replied, " I need not keep the Fourth Commandment which bids me 
obey you." Children are only bound to obey their parents as long 
as they are under their control, and they are only bound to obey in 
matters which come within the sphere of the parental authority, such 
as their manners and behavior at home and abroad, their compan- 
ions, etc. Parents have no right to dictate to their children in regard 
to the calling they shall embrace, for a vocation comes from God. 
Parents cannot dispose of their children's future, when they are no 
longer subject to them. St. Francis of Assisi would not let his 
father make a merchant of him; St. Rose of Lima refused to marry. 
Yet the advice of parents should always be asked; age gives them 
greater discernment and experience of life, and they are the best 
and wisest counsellors a man can have. Holy Scripture exhorts us 
thus: " My son, hear the instruction of thy father" (Prov. i. 8). 

3. Our duty is the same in regard to those who are in authority 
over us, as it is to our parents; our teachers and governors, 
masters and employers, and our elders in general. 

The old are to be respected by the young. " Honor the person of 
the aged man, and rise up before the hoary head" (Lev. xix. 32). 
It becomes the elder to speak first (Ecclus. xxxii. 4). The Spartans 
entertained great respect for the aged; when an old man could not 
find a place at the Olympian games, they all rose up to give him a 
seat. Alexander the Great was one day sitting by a warm fire, when 
he saw an aged soldier shivering in the cold; he called him in and 
gave him a place on his own regal couch. Young people ought to 
heed the counsels of the old, " for of them they shall learn wisdom 
and instruction" (Ecclus. viii. 9). The old act less on impulse, and 
consequently more prudently. Grod appointed a council of seventy 
ancients for the guidance of the Jews (Exod. iv. 29), and the Roman 
Senate was composed of old men. Above all, the aged should never 
be despised, for we too shall become old in our turn (Ecclus. viii. 9). 
Their infirmities must be borne with : " An ancient man rebuke 
not, but entreat him as a father " (1 Tim. v. 1). 

Transgressions of the Fourth Commandment. 

1. He transgresses the Fourth Commandment of God who is 
disrespectful towards his parents; who behaves rudely to them, 
is ashamed of them, etc. 

Cham mocked at his father, when he lay naked and drunk in his 
tent (Gen. ix.). For this his father cursed him; his descendants are 
the negro inhabitants of Africa, and know not the true God. 

1. He who is unkind to his parents, who, for instance, hates 
them, refuses to help them, steals from them, etc. 



373 The Commandments, 

The sons of Jacob, after they had sold their brother Joseph, de- 
ceived and grieved their father (Gen. xxxvii). Absalom spoke 
against his father at the palace gates, lied to him, and rebelled against 
him (2 Kings xv.). 

2. He who disobeys his parents, and will not be corrected by 
them, transgresses this commandment. 

The two sons of the high priest Heli disobeyed their father's 
commands and admonitions (1 Kings ii.). 

How Does God Reward the Observance of the Fourth Command- 
ment f 

1. God promises long life, happiness, and blessings upon earth 
to children who honor their parents. 

At the giving of the law on Sinai God promised long life as the 
reward for keeping the Fourth Commandment (Exod. xx. 12). St. 
Paul holds out the same inducement to the fulfilment of filial duty 
(Eph. vi. 3). Joseph was obedient to his father; the old man loved 
him for it but his brethren hated him. Joseph was made Governor 
of Egypt, and attained the age of a hundred and ten years (Gen. 1.). 
Those who honor their parents honor old age; and as in the provi- 
dence of God there is generally some connection between the work 
and the reward, dutiful children usually reach an advanced age. A 
long life is a great boon to a man; the longer he lives, the more 
merits he can amass for eternity. Under the Old Dispensation a 
long life shortened the sojourn of the soul in limbo, consequently it 
was a greater privilege than under the I^ew Dispensation, when a 
good death is an imtmediate transition to eternal life. Certainly 
many good children die young, but even in this case God fulfils His 
promise, for instead of life on earth He gives them life eternal, 
which is far more to be desired. Besides an innocent life is in itself 
a long life; "a spotless life is old age" (Wisd. iv. 9). God takes 
many a one out of this world that he may escape contamination: 
"lest wickedness should alter his understanding" (Wisd. iv. 11). 
Moreover the blessings which parents invoke upon their children 
are very powerful. Witness the blessing which the aged Tobias gave 
to his son when he set out on his journey; the blessings which N'oe 
pronounced upon Sem and Japheth. Honor your parents that their 
blessing may rest upon you. " The father's blessing establisheth the 
houses of the children" (Ecclus. iii. 11). "He that honoreth his 
mother is as one that layeth up a treasure " (v. 5) ; " The relieving of 
thy father shall never be forgotten" (v. 15). Hence it comes that 
dutiful children are generally prosperous, or at least have real con- 
tentment. The enjoyment of happiness and peace is more to be de- 
sired than wealth. Those who behave well to their parents are blessed 
in their turn with dutiful children, who are a comfort to them. 
" He that honoreth his father shall have joy in his own children " 
(v. 6). Happiness in this world and in the next is the reward Go<! 
bestows upon children who honor their parents. 

2. God threatens to send upon those who do not honor their 
parents shame upon earth, a miserable end, everlasting damnation. 



The Ten Commandments of God. 373 

It is unquestionably a great sin to treat one^s greatest earthly bene- 
factor with ingratitude, and because of the magnitude of the sin the 
punishment is proportionately heavy. Those who forget their father 
and mother God will forget, and allow them to suffer reproach (Ecclus. 
xxiii. 18, 19). As a tree on which there were no blossoms can produce 
no fruit, so the man who was disobedient in his youth will not be 
honored in his old age. Bad children frequently come to a miserable 
end ; witness the death of the two sons of Heli, who perished in battle 
(1 Kings iv. 11), also the fate that overtook the treacherous Absalom, 
who, having rebelled against his father David, and defeated him, 
was caught by his long hair in the branches of an oak, and hung 
there, pierced by three lances (2 Kings xviii.). Bad children are in 
great danger of losing their souls. If God deals so severely in the 
Day of Judgment with those who have failed to perform works of 
mercy towards their neighbor, how much the more rigorously will 
He judge those who have been unkind to their own parents. The 
Apostle says that those who are disobedient to parents are worthy 
of death (Eom. i. 30). The Jewish law pronounced a curse upon 
him who honoreth not his father and mother (Deut. xxvii. 16). 
Again, " He that striketh his father or mother shall be put to death " 
(Exod. xxi. 15). " The eye that mocketh at his mother, let the ravens 
pick it out and the young eagles eat it " (Prov. xxx. 17). God laid this 
strict command upon the Jews: "A stubborn and unruly son, who 
will not hear the commandments of his father and mother, and 
slighteth obedience; the people of the city shall stone him and he 
shall die, that all Israel hearing it may be afraid " (Deut. xxi. 18, 21). 
Those who have not honored their parents, by divine retribution 
often have unruly children of their own, as experience frequently 
shows. " By what things a man sinneth, by the same he is tor- 
mented " (Wisd. xi. 17). Cham despised his father, and his descend- 
ants were the degraded nations whom God caused to be cast out of 
Chanaan. 



2. OUR DUTY TOWARDS THOSE IN AUTHORITY. 

1. God has appointed two powers, the spiritual and the secular, 
for the direction of human society. To the spiritual power He 
has committed the guidance of souls, to the secular the main- 
tenance of peace and order. 

Throughout the whole of creation we observe the existence of a 
certain mutual dependence; the moon is a satellite of the earth, 
the earth and the other planets of our solar system revolve round 
the sun ; the mineral kingdom supplies nourishment to the vegetable 
kingdom, the vegetable to the animal, while each and all are for the 
service of man. Among animals we find the same subordination of 
some to others; the bees are governed by a queen; the birds, the 
wild beasts of the forest, the fish in the seas have their leaders, and 
obey a kind of military rule. In our own bodies we see how one 
member commands, the others obey. In the spiritual world the same 
law of dependence exists as in the natural order; there are angels 
of higher and lowlier rank. In like manner it is the will of God that 
some men should rule and others be subject. In consequence of 



374 The Commandments^ 

original sin, without rulers human society would soon resemble an 
army without commanders, a disorderly rabble. Governors are to the 
State what beams are to a wall; without beams the building would 
collapse; so society would without rulers. When, after the Fall, 
men began to rage against each other like wild beasts, and the son 
of the first man slew his brother, God set rulers over men, to restrain 
them. Our rulers ought in some measure to reflect as in a mirror 
the divine power and providence watching over mankind. Just as 
there are two lights in the firmament of heaven, the sun to shine by 
day, and the moon by night, so two powers are instituted to govern 
mankind. The spiritual, like the sun, is the superior because it 
guides man to his eternal goal; whereas the secular authority is pri- 
marily concerned with the temporal welfare of its subjects. The 
earthly interests of the people are entrusted to the ruler, their spir- 
itual interests to the priest. Although the two powers have separate 
aims, they mutually complete each other. They are like the two 
golden cherubim, shadowing the Ark of the Covenant with their 
wings. 

2. The highest spiritual authority was given by God to the 
Pope, the highest secular authority to the monarch of the land ; 
in most countries the people have a share in the secular govern- 
ment. 

Both Pope and king receive their power from God. Our Lord said 
to St. Peter: "Feed My lambs, feed My sheep" (John xxi. 17). 
Thus the Apostle Peter was constituted Prince of the Apostles, and 
visible Head of the Church Militant by Christ Himself. The chief 
rank and spiritual supremacy conferred on St. Peter, is vested, by 
Christ's appointment, in the person of the Bishop of Rome for the 
time being. That the head or governor of the State also derives 
his power from God we learn from the words Our Lord addressed to 
Pilate : " Thou shouldest not have any power against Me, unless it 
were given thee from above" (John xix. 11). "By God kings reign 
and lawgivers decree just things " (Prov. viii. 15). " Hear, ye kings, 
for power is given you by the Lord" (Wisd. vi. 4). "There is no 
power but from God" (Rom. xiii. 1). Monarchs usually add the 
words " By the grace of God " to their title. In all European coun- 
tries except Russia and Turkey the sovereign consults the will of the 
Parliament, or representatives of the people. 

3. Our duties towards Pope and king are similar to our 
duties towards God, for they are both His representatives. 

The vicegerents of God, both spiritual and temporal, are often 
called ministers of God (Wisd. vi. 6), or the Lord's anointed (1 Kings 
xxiv. 7) ; they are even spoken of as "gods " (Exod. xxii. 28), just as 
one who fills the place of the king is called the viceroy. The Pope 
terms himself the servant of the seiwants of God. We owe to 
almighty God : Worship and fidelity (First Commandment) ; rever- 
ence (Second Commandment); and service (Third Commandment). 
We owe to His vicegerents obedience and loyalty, respect and service. 

Our duties towards the Supreme Pontiff are these: We are 



The Ten Commandments of God. 375 

bound to obey liim in spiritual matters, to be loyal to liim, to 
respect his authority, and by prayers and offerings assist him in 
the arduous duties of his office. 

We are under the obligation to obey the Pope in all spiritual mat- 
ters. All the pastors of the Church and the faithful of every rank 
and rite are subject to the Pope, and bound to yield him perfect 
obedience. What the head is to the other members of the human 
body, that the Pope is to the body of Christ; i.e., the Church (1 Cor. 
xii. 27). As he is the representative of Christ (2 Cor. v. 20), he de- 
clares to us the will of God ; he can say : " We are ambassadors for 
Christ, God, as it were, exhorting by us." The words Christ ad- 
dressed to the apostles : " He that heareth you, heareth Me " (Luke 
X. 16), unquestionably apply above all else to St. Peter and his suc- 
cessors. He, therefore, who disobeys the Pope, or turns a deaf ear to 
his admonitions, cannot please God. Leo XIII. has repeatedly urged 
upon the faithful the frequent recitation of the Rosary; what is our 
duty in this respect ? We ought, furthermore, to be true and faithful 
to the Holy Father, for he is not only the Head of the visible Church, 
but the rock whereon it rests. Those who cast off their allegiance to 
the See of Rome, as the Greeks did (1053), fall away from God. To 
them (whom we call schismatics) the words God spoke to Samuel are 
applicable : " They have not rejected thee, but Me, that I should not 
reign over them" (1 Kings viii. 7). We must also reverence the 
Pope. We know that it is Christ's will that we should revere His 
ministers as Himself ; now as the Holy Father is the chief of Christ's 
ministers, the greatest respect is due to him. On this account the 
title : " His Holiness " is given to him. It is moreover our duty to 
assist the Pope by our prayers and oblations; the early Christians 
prayed for St. Peter when he was in prison (Acts xii. 5), and in the 
present day his successors are not free from persecution. Let us 
therefore follow the example of the early Christians. The Pope has, 
besides, to provide for the many needs of the Church, for the propa- 
gation of the Gospel in heathen lands, for the maintenance of eccle- 
siastical institutions, etc. Thus he requires our pecuniary assistance, 
and requires it all the more since his temporary possessions have been 
wrested from him. The alms collected for the Holy Father are called 
Peter's pence. Catholics are too apt to underrate or overlook the 
importance of contributing to this object. The enemies of the 
Church are wont to apply the epithet ultra montane to Catholics 
who are firm adherents of the Holy See, to imply that they are want- 
ing in patriotism, because they recognize as their spiritual sovereign 
one who is " beyond the mountains " {ultra montes) ; but as a matter 
of fact good Catholics are good patriots. Origen says : " The more 
a Christian fears God, the more loyal he is to the emperor." Our 
duties towards our pastors are the same as towards the Holy Father; 
we are bound to contribute towards their support. " The Lord 
ordained that they who preach the Gospel should live by the Gospel " 
(1 Cor. ix. 14); "The laborer is worthy of his reward" (1 Tim. v. 
18). 

Our duty towards the ruler of our country requires us to 
obey all just laws which are issued in his name, to be loyal to 



376 21ie Commandments, 

him, to hold him in respect, and to support him by our prayers, 
by the payment of taxes, and by military service if required of 
us. 

We are not only bound to obey the laws of the State because of 
the penalty incurred by disobedience, but also for conscience' sake, 
because the commands of the secular authority are the commands 
of God (Rom. xiii. 2, 5). Remember how willingly Joseph and 
Mary conformed to the decree of Augustus, and journeyed to Beth- 
lehem to be enrolled (Luke ii.). But if the temporal power com- 
mands something which God forbids, we must recall to mind the 
apostles' words : " We ought to obey (>od rather than men " (Acts v. 
29). The three Hebrew youths in the fiery furnace and the seven 
Machabees obeyed this precept, likewise St. Maurice and the Theban 
legion. We are however seldom called upon to do this in the present. 
day. It is our bounden duty to be loyal to our ruler, especially in 
time of war. Soldiers are required to take the military oath. It is 
never allowable to rebel against the sovereign authority in the land, 
for whoso resists the higher powers, resists the ordinance of God 
(Rom. xiii. 1). We are to be "subject not only to the good and 
gentle, but also to the froward" (1 Pet. ii. 18). Bad rulers are gen- 
erally sent by God as a chastisement for the sins of the nation. If 
the monarch should be tyrannical, we must implore the help of God, 
and His help will be granted when the people forsake their evil 
doings. We are also to honor the ruler of our country. " Fear God. 
Honor the king" (1 Pet. ii. 17). A king is spoken of as "His 
Majesty," and a royal reception is prepared for him wherever he 
goes. We ought, moreover, to pray for our rulers. It is acceptable 
to God that prayers and supplications be made for all that are in a 
high station (1 Tim. ii.). Besides prayer for our rulers brings a 
blessing on ourselves, for by it we obtain the passing of decrees bene- 
ficial to their people. At High Mass the priest prays for the sover- 
eign ruler. Christ sanctioned the payment of taxes, when He said: 
" Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's " (Matt. xxii. 21). He 
paid for Himself and St. Peter the tax levied on every head for the 
service of the Temple ; and in order to do so. He bade St. Peter go to 
the sea and cast a hook, and in the mouth of the first fish he caught 
he would find the piece of silver required for the tax (Matt. xvii. 26). 
It is only just that those who enjoy the peace and welfare which it 
is the object of the Government to secure, should contribute towards 
defraying the expenses thus incurred. Besides, the money obtained 
by taxation is laid out for the good of the nation on public works, 
the erection of schools and hospitals, the maintenance of the army, 
of government officials, etc. Thus the members of the body supply 
food to the digestive organs, whence nourishment is afforded to the 
whole. It is not right to defraud the State in the matter of taxation. 
Military service, as required in some lands, is for the maintenance of 
domestic peace and for the protection of the country from foreign 
foes. Those who in time of war offer their lives for their fellow-coun- 
trymen, receive a great reward from God. Our duty towards the rep- 
resentatives of the sovereign are similar to those towards himself. 
"Be subject to the king as cxcelliTipr, or to governors as sent by him; 
for so is the will of God " (1 Pet. ii. 14X 



The Ten Commandments of God. 377 

In addition to all this, the citizens ought to assist their ruler 
in the government of the country, by choosing as their repre- 
sentatives men of experience and Christian principles. 

Not only the representatives of the people, but the electors of those 
representatives, have a weighty responsibility in God's sight. The 
former are responsible for the laws they make, the latter for the 
men they choose to make the laws. In the exercise of his civil rights, 
it is incumbent on the citizen to obey the will of his Lord and God, 
for he will one day have to answer for the manner in which he exer- 
cised that right. In all human affairs the truths of Christianity must 
be our guiding light. Let no one therefore assert that religion has 
nothing to do with politics. Statesmen, public functionaries, sen- 
ators, members of Congress, Cabinet officers, will all have to give an 
account of every word they have spoken, every vote they have given. 
And electors will be responsible for the men they have returned to Con- 
gress or the Senate ; consequently they should elect men of experience, 
acquainted with the law, and above all, possessed of Christian prin- 
ciple ; for those who are destitute of all religious beliefs cannot be ex- 
pected to act conscientiously, or adhere to their promises. And since 
matters closely connected with the essentials of religion are often the 
subject of debate, it is the duty of Catholics to vote for such candi- 
dates as will act justly in dealing with ecclesiastical questions, and 
have the interests of the Church at heart. 

If a Catholic, by giving his vote to a candidate who is hostile 
to the Church, or by abstaining from voting, makes himself in 
part responsible for the success of that candidate, he has much 
to answer for. 

Catholic electors ought not to return as their representative one 
who is only a nominal, not a practical Catholic, who regards with 
indifference or contempt the teaching and ministers of the Church. 
Before going to the ballot they should ascertain the views of the 
candidate upon education, marriage, the observance of Sunday, etc.; 
better not to vote at all than vote for one who is hostile to religion. 
It is, however, a duty to vote if thereby one can avert evil and 
promote what is good. Let no man say: My vote is of no conse- 
quence ; it might turn the scale, and if not, at any rate it lessens the 
defeat of the non-successful candidate. Those who are not entitled 
to vote ought to pray that the result of the election may be favorable 
to the cause of religion and of the country in general. 

4. He who grossly offends against either the ecclesiastical or 
secular authorities has to expect the severe chastisement of God 
on earth, and punishment in the world to come. 

Core and his companions, who rose up against the Jewish priest- 
hood, were swallowed up by the earth, as an example to the people 
(Numb. xvi.). Remember the deplorable fate of Absalom, who re- 
belled against tbe king his father (2 Kings xviii.). Also that of 
Semei, who not only insulted King David, but disobeyed the man- 
date forbidding him to cross the brook Cedron (3 Kings ii. 46). 
High treason is now punished with a lon^ tenn of imprisonment 



378 The Commandments, 

* They that resist the power resist the ordinance of God and purchase 
to themselves damnation" (Rom. xiii. 2). 

3. THE DUTIES OF THOSE WHO ABE IN AUTHORITY. 

1. The Christian ought not to strive after a position of au- 
thority v^^hich he is not competent to fill (Eccles. vii. 6). 

In this respect every one may well take example by Moses. He did 
not aspire to the post of leader of the Hebrew people, but only as- 
sumed it when called by God to do so. In fact, at first he would not 
accept it, deeming himself too weak for its duties. And later on, 
weary of the office, he desired to be relieved of it. Pope Gregory 
the Great fled to the forests when he heard that he would probably 
be elected Pope. Many eminent saints, such as St. Ambrose and St. 
Augustine, accepted the episcopal dignity most reluctantly. Yet all 
these men were unquestionably well qualified to fill their respective 
offices. How great is the presumption of those who strive to obtain 
some high post for which they lack the necessary strength and 
talents, and to which they are not called by God ! Those who aspire 
to dignities, to the duties of which they are unequal, are like men 
who take the helm without knowing anything of navigation; or like 
those who load their shoulders with burdens heavier than they can 
carry. Our Lord compares such persons to thieves, who force their 
way into a sheepfold (John x.). But it is not wrong for one who 
feels himself competent to fulfil the duties of a post, and knows that 
he may effect much good if he hold it, to endeavor to obtain it. A 
Catholic may aspire to the priesthood if he has a vocation, or to a 
place among the governing powers of the land if he possesses the 
necessary qualifications. 

2. He who is called by God to fill some post of authority, 
must not on that account think much of himself, but rather 
consider the responsibility laid on him. 

A man may be certain that he is called by God, if an appointment 
is given him without any effort on his own part to obtain it. When 
St. Gregory the Great was sought for, and his hiding-place in the 
forest discovered by the populace, he no longer hesitated to accept 
the tiara, for he saw it to be God's will that he should do so. St. 
Alphonsus did not refuse the See of St. Agatha, when Pope Clement 
XIII. strongly urged him to accept it. Dignities are apparently con- 
ferred by the hand of man, but in reality it is God Who bestows them 
(Matt. XXV. 15). As a gardener guides the water of the spring 
whithersoever he will, so God influences kings and princes to bestow 
their favors on those whom He has chosen to be their recipients. 
" The heart of the king is in the hand of the Lord ; as the divisions of 
waters, whithersoever He will He shall turn it" (Prov. xxi. 1). He 
is foolish who thinks more of himself on account of the dignity con- 
ferred on him, for it makes him no better in God's si^^ht ; virtue alone 
gives a man true worth and distinction. " Earthly greatness," says 
St. Thomas Aquinas " is fleeting and short-lived ; like smoke, it 
quickly comes and quickly vanishes; it passes away like a dream." 



The Ten Commandments of God, 379 

Virtue, on the contrary, brings everlasting glory. Many that are first 
here shall be last hereafter, and the last shall be first (Matt. xix. 30). 
Herod was a king, Mary and Joseph were ordinary people; but he 
was a bad man, whereas they were just and beloved of God. Mary 
and Joseph now fill glorious thrones in heaven ; and where is Herod ? 
Many who now in the gloom of this life appear estimable and great, 
will in the light of eternity, when the secrets of all hearts are dis- 
closed, be seen to be evil and corrupt. " A most severe judgment will 
be for those who bear rule" (Wisd. vi. 6). The higher the post, the 
greater the responsibility. This truth should make the great ones of 
the earth humble, conscientious, thoughtful. God requires those 
who are in high places to hold their office as if they had it not ; that 
is, they should regard it as only committed to their keeping for a 
brief period, and should be ready at any moment to give it up. 

3. Those who rule others ought to promote as far as possible 
the welfare of their subjects, and treat them with impartiality 
and justice. 

As those who are set in authority over others reflect in their person 
the power of God, they should take Him as their model ; besides, they 
are His vicegerents. The plenipotentiary of the emperor is bound 
in word and deed to conform to the instructions given him by his 
imperial master; if he acts on his own judgment, he is reprimanded. 
Governors ought above all to study the welfare of their subjects; 
since this is the purpose of their appointment. The princes of the 
earth are God's ministers for the good of mankind (Rom. xiii. 4). 
The common weal, not the benefit of a single individual, or of a few, 
ought to be their object, and they should be ready generously to sac- 
rifice their own interests for the good of their subjects. Christ, the 
Good Shepherd, laid down His life for His sheep (John x. 11). If a 
shepherd exposes himself to hardships and dangers for the sake of 
animals destined for slaughter, what ought not to be done for im- 
mortal souls, whom Christ redeemed with His blood, and for whom 
account must be given? Rulers ought moreover to be impartial, and 
treat all without distinction, whether rich or poor, with equal kind- 
ness, remembering " there is no respect of persons with God " (Rom. 
ii. 11; 2 Par. xix. 7). " God made the little and the great, and hath 
equal care of all" (Wisd. vi. 8). He frequently declares Himself 
to be the helper of the needy and oppressed (Ps. xlv. 2). "The 
Lord is nigh unto them that are of a contrite heart " (Ps. xxxiii. 19). 
The more destitute we are of hmnan succor, the more God regards 
us with His mercy. Consequently rulers ought to befriend the poor 
and lowly (Is. i. 17). Unfortunately superiors are apt to think them- 
selves justified in going to all lengths, so long as they do not over- 
step their powers. Some proud men imagine it to he below their 
dignity to treat their fellow-men as brethren ; they think they would 
thereby forget what was due to them. This is by no means the case. 
Those who are in authority must beware of acting unjustly, or of 
allowing themselves to be corrupted by bribes (Exod. xxiii. 8). They 
must not favor the rich and powerful, and be induced to give unjust 
judgment, as was the unhappy Pilate. Fearful lest the Jews should 
accuse him to the emperor, he sentenced Our Lord to death, though 
he knew Him to be innocent. What he dreaded happened; he was 



360 The Commandments, 

accused and condemned and banished to France. The curse of God 
rests upon unjust judges (Deut. xxvii. 19). Blessed Thomas More 
used to say that if his father, whom he dearly loved, came to him with 
a grievance, and on the other side was the devil whom he hated more 
than words could say, provided the latter was in the right, he should 
have justice at his hands. No man should ever be condemned un- 
heard. If any one went to Alexander the Great with a charge against 
another, he used to close one ear, saying: "I give one ear to the 
accuser, the other to the accused." Even God, Who is omniscient, did 
not condemn Adam until He had heard his defence and proved to him 
his guilt. 

4. Those who are in high places ought to set a good example. 

The reason why superiors are bound to set a good example is two- 
fold. On the one hand they occupy a conspicuous position, all eyes 
are on them; like a city seated on a mountain, they cannot be hid 
(Matt. V. 14). Others imitate them; as is the judge, so also are his 
ministers (Ecclus. x. 2). Woe betide them if they lead an evil life! 
On the other hand, superiors can effect much more by example than 
by precept. Deeds are more eloquent than words. Rulers ought, to 
pray for their subjects; like the husbandman in the Gospel, they 
should entreat the Lord of the vineyard to spare the barren fig-tree 
and leave it a year, in the hope that with careful cultivation it 
may bear fruit. Pastors are specially bound to pray for their flock, 
and to offer the holy sacrifice on Sundays and holydays for the living 
and the dead. 

THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

In the Fifth Coimnandment almighty God forbids us to destroy 
our own life, or that of our neighbor, or to treat the lower animals 
with cruelty. 

1. OUR DUTY IN RESPECT TO OUR OWN LIFE. 

Many of the ceremonies in the administration of the sacraments, 
ceremonies full of meaning, are performed upon the body. By these 
the Church intends to inspire us with great respect for our bodies, 
and to teach us their high worth and dignity. 

1. Our body was created by God as an abode for our immortal 
soul. 

The condition of the soul is often dependent upon the condi- 
tion of that abode. 

When God made the human body out of lifeless earth, it was an 
uninhabited tenement; but it was destined to be inhabited, therefore 
God created the soul to be its occupant. St. Peter speaks of his body 
as a tabernacle which he would shortly have to quit (2 Pet. i. 14). It 
fares with the soul in the body as with the inmate of a house. If 
the house be unhealthy, the dweller in it falls sick. Our body is like 
the shell of an egg; if the shell be injured, the young bird within is 
hurt; so if our mortal frame sustains injury, the spirit, the noble 



The Ten Commandments of God. 381 

inmate of that dwelling, suffers with it. The Romans had a proverb : 
A healthy mind in a healthy body. Our body is not our own, it 
belongs to God (1 Cor. vi. 13). It belongs to God, not only because 
He created it, but because Christ purchased it with a great price (1 
Cor. vi. 20). We are bound to take care of what is the property of 
another. The tenant of a hired house has no right to damage or 
destroy that house, so we are not at liberty to injure or destroy our 
body, the abode of the soul, created by God and belonging to Him. 
We must not do with our body what we will, but what God wills. 

Our body is an implement of the soul, intrusted by God to 
our keeping, to be made instrumental in amassing merits for 
eternity. 

Like all other instruments, our bodies can be misused. Hence St. 
Paul warns Christian people not to yield their members as instru- 
ments of iniquity unto sin (Rom. vi. 13). As God will require us 
to give account of the manner in which we have employed the talents 
given us (Matt. xxv. 19), so we shall have to answer for the em- 
ployment of the body, which the soul informs and makes instru- 
mental in the performance of the duties of our calling. Our Lord 
told St. Gertrude that after the resurrection, on the members of the 
body employed in His service surpassing dignity and excellence would 
be conferred. 

2. Since the life and health of the body are of great importance 
for the life of the soul and for our eternal salvation, we are bound 
to take precautions for the preservation of our health and of our 
life. 

By means of cleanliness, temperance, regularity, industry, 
and the use of remedies in case of sickness. 

Health is worth more to us than vast riches (Ecclus. xxx. 16). 
For the longer we keep our health and our life, the more treasures 
we can lay up for eternity, where neither the rust nor moth doth 
consume, where thieves do not break through, nor steal (Matt. vi. 
20). If we thoughtlessly do anything to shorten our life, we defraud 
ourselves of a part of our seed-time. The eagle takes the utmost care 
of its egg, not for the sake of the shell, but of the young eagle in- 
closed in the egg; so we should take care of our body because of the 
soul that dwells within it. Cleanliness is to be obser^^ed in our person, 
our apparel, the rooms we inhabit; temperance in eating and drink- 
ing. Abstemiousness promotes health and prolongs life. (See what 
has been said on the advantages of fasting.) Many men of weak 
physique naturally, have so increased their strength by abstemious- 
ness that they have been capable of immense activity. St. Paul in his 
epistles often mentions his bodily weakness. Regularity is to be 
observed in regard to meals, the time of going to rest and rising 
in the morning; in one's work and in the arrangement of one's time. 
Above all, let us never be unemployed. By work we may not only 
earn our daily bread, but do much toward?^ keeping ourselves in 
health. Work rircnlates the blood, and gives an appetite for food. 
Stagnant wate'- becomes foul, and the blood of the idler is apt to get 



382 The Commandments, 

into a bad state. Yet we must not overtax our strength with work; 
moderate labor invigorates, excessive toil ruins the powers of our 
body. Finally, it is our duty to have recourse to remedies in case 
of sickness. It is sinful, if any one is dangerously ill, not to call in 
medical aid, and employ remedies. "Honor the physician for the 
need thou hast of him, for the Most High hath created him " (Ecclus. 
xxxviii. 1). "The Most High hath created medicines out of the 
earth, and a wise man will not abhor them" (v. 4). However, if the 
cure is too costly, or if it involves acute suffering, it may be for- 
borne. 

Our solicitude concerning the preservation of our health and 
of our life must not, however, be so great as to make us forgetful 
of our eternal salvation. 

The good things of time, such as life and bodily well-being, are 
not intrinsically valuable and to be desired, but only in so far as they 
are conducive to our eternal welfare. " The Spirit of God does not 
remain in a man forever, because he is flesh" (Gen. vi. 3), i.e., 
fleshly-minded. " The wisdom of the flesh is death ; it is an enemy to 
God" (Rom. viii. 6). The more the body is studied and pampered, 
the more the soul is neglected and ruined (St. Augustine). Hence 
Our Lord admonishes us : " Be not solicitous for meat and raiment. 
For your heavenly Father knoweth that you have need of all these 
things ; He feeds the birds of the air, and clothes the lilies of the field, 
though they labor not : are not you of more value than they ? " (Matt, 
vi. 25, 32). 

3. Furthermore we are under a strict obligation to do nothing 
that tends to destroy health or life. 

Consequently it is a sin to rashly hazard one's life, wantonly 
to injure one's healthy or to take one's own life. 

1. Those persons generally risk their life without a thought 
who perform hazardous feats, or who neglect due precautions. 

Acrobats, equestrian performers, lion-tamers, and the like commit 
sin unless they take all necessary precautions to avoid fatal acci- 
dents ; the professions they follow are objectionable on moral grounds, 
and even unlawful. Performers of this character are too often disso- 
lute in their manners, and their hazardous feats frequently cost them 
their life. The same may be said of those who are foolhardy, and 
wilfully risk their lives in athletic sports, or public games, such as 
the bull-fights which are the national amusement in Spain. Want of 
ordinary prudence is also highly reprehensible, as for instance, to 
cross the line when a train is approaching, by which many have lost 
their lives, or to stand under a tree, or otherwise expose one's self dur- 
ing a thunderstorm. Again, in the case of infectious disease great 
precaution is necessary; only the priest, the doctor, and the nurse, 
should be allowed access to the sick-room. There are other ways 
whereby one may place one's life in jeopardy: by drinking cold water 
or taking a cold bath when violently heated; playing with loaded 
fire-arms; jumping into or out of a train while it is in motion; 
touching the electric wires with the bare hand, or hanging on behind 
a carriage as children are wont to do, with the chance of getting 



The Ten Commandments of God. J83 

their limbs crushed by the wheels. Therefore be prudent and never 
risk your life rashly. 

2. Some persons are in the habit of injuring their health by 
indulging to an excess in amusements, by vanity in dress, and 
partaking too freely of unwholesome food. 

By excess in amusement is meant frequent playing and dancing 
all night, smoking and drinking immoderately, etc. " By surfeiting 
many have perished" (Ecclus. xxxvii. 34). By vanity in dress is 
meant tight lacing, which by undue pressure upon the vital organs, 
deranges their action, and has even caused sudden death. The 
fashion of squeezing the feet into pointed shoes is also injurious. 
Spirits, if taken in large quantities, or even strong decoctions of tea 
or coffee, are decidedly prejudicial to the digestion and the nerves. 

3. Suicides are generally men who are devoid of religious 
beliefs, who have got into trouble or committed some great sin, 
and who despair of God's mercy and assistance; they are some- 
times not accountable for their actions, and consequently not 
to be blamed for them. 

King Saul lost all hope when he was grievously wounded and sur- 
rounded by his enemies ; he then cast himself on his sword (1 Kings 
xxxi.). The keeper of the prison at Philippi, greatly alarmed at see- 
ing the doors of the prison open, wherein St. Paul was confined, was 
about to kill himself (Acts xvi. 27). Judas, in despair at the enor- 
mity of his crime, went and hanged himself (Matt, xxvii. 5). How 
often we read of people destroying themselves because they have lost 
their all at the gambling-table, or because they have ruined their 
character by embezzling money, or because they cannot obtain the 
object of their illicit passion. But often madness, or overtaxed 
nerves, cause men to take their own lives without knowing what they 
do. Let us beware, therefore, how we hastily judge and condemn 
them. The prevalence of suicide is however principally and generally 
to be accribed to the lack of religion, of a firm belief in a future life, 
of confidence in God's willingness to aid the unfortunate and to 
pardon the repentant sinner. Experience teaches that as religion 
decreases in a land, the number of suicides increases. The ancients 
considered self-destruction to be dishonorable and blameworthy; they 
cut off the right hand of the self-murderer, and buried it apart from 
the body. The Church denies Christian burial to one who has died 
by his own hand, unless insanity had rendered him irresponsible. 
The refusal of the burial rites is not intended as a condemnation of 
the individual, but to express horror of the crime, and to act as a 
deterrent to others. A man's life is not his own, it belongs to God, 
Who takes it away at His will (Dent, xxxii. 39). Thus self-destruc- 
tion is a presumptuous encroachment upon the divine rights, and 
shows contempt for God, by flinging back at Him His greatest gift to 
man, which is life. The suicide also defrauds society, whereof he is 
a member ; he wrongs his family, by bringing sorrow and shame upon 
it; he cruelly injures himself and gives scandal to others. It is even 
worse to take one's own life than that of another, because in the 
former case one escapes the punishment of the law. Far from being 



384 The Commandments, 

an heroic deed, it is a most cowardly act; real heroism is shovm by 
bearing bravely the miseries of life. Besides, instead of obtaining 
relief from suffering, the suicide only falls into what is far worse. 
The godless press of the day will excuse the self-murderer, saying: 
He expiated his crime with his life. Instead of expiating a crime, 
he adds another to it. 

4. On the other hand it is not merely right, but even meri- 
torious, to sacrifice one's bodily health or life in order to gain 
everlasting life, or to rescue one's fellow-man from physical or 
spiritual death. 

All the holy martyrs preferred to sacrifice their life rather than 
commit sin. By so doing they merited life eternal, for Our Lord 
says : " He that shall lose his life for My sake shall find it " (Matt. 
X. 39). Witness Eleazar, the Machabees, St. Lawrence. Missionaries 
in heathen lands are in constant danger of death, and many of them 
ruin their health by the hardship and exertions they undergo. St. 
Francis Xavier, the apostle of the Indies, was, at the close of the 
day, so exhausted with preaching and administering Baptism, that he 
could scarcely speak or move his arm. Yet this is not wrong, but 
most praiseworthy. The same may be said of priests, doctors, and 
nurses who attend those who have an infectious disease. St. Aloysius 
and St. Charles Borromeo died of the plague, caught while nursing 
the sick in the hospital. It is also permissible to risk one's life to 
rescue any one who has, for instance, fallen into the fire or the water, 
or to expose one's self in battle for the defence of one's country. 
And a human soul is of such great value, that all earthly goods, nay 
life itself, should be sacrificed to save it. Christ gave us an example 
by dying upon the cross for the salvation of mankind. Of course in 
performing an heroic act of this nature, we ought not to seek death — 
that would be sinful — but only to think of the deed itself, of which 
death may be an accidental accompaniment. 

2. OUR DUTY IN REGARD TO THE LIFE OF OUR 

NEIGHBOR. 

A strict obligation is laid upon us to avoid everything that 
may destroy the health or life of our neighbor. 

1. Accordingly it is sinful to wish ill to one's neighbor, to 
injure his health, to challenge him or accept a duel, or to put him 
to death unjustly and willingly. 

1. He who hates his neighbor, wishes him dead; hence 
hatred often leads to murder. 

Hatred suggests revenge. Witness Esau, who sought to kill his 
brother Jacob (Gen. xxvii. 41) ; King Saul, who repeatedly endeav- 
ored to slay David (1 Kings xxiv.) ; Joseph's brethren, who would 
actually have put Joseph to death, had not Ruben interfered (Gen. 
xxxvii.). There is little distinction to be made between hatred and 
murder; in God's sight the will is the same as the deed. Hence St. 
John says : " Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer " (1 John 
iii. 15). Our Lord declares that he who is angry with his brother 



TJie Ten Commandments of Ood. 385 

is in danger of the judgment (Matt. v. 22). Keal hatred is a mortal 
sin, whether the evil one wishes to one's neighbor be great or small. 
However it is no proof of hatred to detest the evil qualities one sees 
in one's neighbor, or to abhor his conduct, for this is not incompatible 
with affection for him personally. 

2. Men often injure their neighbor's health by quarrels and 
blows, by the adulteration of articles of food, by dangerous 
practical jokes, and culpable negligence. 

By quarrelling one excites one's neighbor, and deprives him of 
interior peace and content, thus destroying his well-being. Conten- 
tion and quarrels cause shedding of blood (Ecclus. xxviii. 13). Blows 
often cause severe pain or bodily injury. For assault one may be 
arrested and imprisoned. The practice of adulterating articles of 
food is only too common nowadays ; flour, milk, butter, wine, beer, etc., 
are mingled with foreign substances, often of a deleterious nature, or 
a manufactured imitation is sold for the genuine article. As these 
adulterated goods contain little nourishment, and much that is prej- 
udicial to health, tradesmen who thus defraud the public deserve 
condign punishment. In the Middle Ages they were burned, together 
with their falsified wares. Practical jokes, such as tripping any one 
up, may cause fatal injuries. Culpable carelessness often occasions 
serious accidents; e.g., furious driving, heedlessness in the handling 
of fire-arms, neglecting to warn passers-by if anything is likely to 
fall, etc. 

3. Duelling is nothing short of murder. The Church pun- 
ishes it by excommunicating the combatants, and denying Chris- 
tian burial to those who are killed (Council of Trent, 25, 19). 

By the mere fact of challenging to single combat, or accepting a 
challenge, a man becomes excommunicated; the same holds good 
of those who take the part of seconds, or who sanction the duel by 
their presence. Let no one say, he has given his opponent permission 
to kill him ; he cannot give another a right which he does not himself 
possess. A Catholic is bound to refuse to fight a duel, even if he 
thereby incurs the imputation of cowardice, or if he thereby lose the 
chance of promotion. The duellist is guilty of twofold murder; he 
intends to kill his antagonist, and at the same time he risks his own 
life. While he imagines he is repairing an insult to his honor, he 
loses the respect of all sensible persons, for he shows himself to be 
enslaved by pride, resentment, and cruelty. Skill in the use of 
weapons will not avenge an insult; the duellist should seek satisfac- 
tion in the law-courts. But let him who would acquire great merit in 
God's sight, follow the teaching and example of Our Redeemer, and 
not seek to avenge himself, but bear injustice patiently, for this is 
the greatest heroism that can be imagined. It is noteworthy that 
many of the ablest generals and monarchs were strongly opposed to 
duelling, and prohibited it under severe penalties. It is related of 
Gustavus Adolphus, that he once yielded to the request of two 
officers of high rank, and permitted a duel ; but at the appointed hour 
he appeared on the scene with a tnilitary escort, and said: "Now 
fight if you will, but woe betide you if one falls, for the other shall 



386 The Oommanamems, 

instantly be beheaded." A reconciliation took place at once be* 
tween the two of&cers. Frederick II. of Prussia used to expel duel- 
lists from the army, saying: "I want brave soldiers, not execu- 
tioners." 

4. Whoso kills his neighbor unjustly and intentionally, com- 
mits a heinous sin. Such a one is called a murderer. 

Cain was a murderer; he slew his brother Abel. God Himself 
said that the voice of Abel's blood cried to Him from the earth for 
vengeance (Gen. iv. 10). The murderer robs his victim of the 
highest earthly good, his life; he deprives him of the opportunity of 
gaining merits for eternity, and of preparing himself for death. 
But a man who kills unintentionally is not a murderer (Deut. xix. 
4), yet he is seldom free from sin, as a fatal blow is generally the 
result of culpable inadvertence. The executioner appointed to carry 
out the sentence of the judge is not a murderer, since he does not 
act unjustly. 

2. He commits a still greater sin who destroys the spiritual 
life of his neighbor, either by tempting him to evil or by giving 
scandal. 

"If thou persuade thy neighbor to sin," St. Augustine says, 
"thou art his murderer." And he who gives scandal is guilty of 
murder. ISTay, even of a greater sin than murder, because the life of 
the soul is of far more value than the life of the body. If a thousand 
men were put to death, less harm would be done than if one soul were 
condemned to everlasting perdition. If the blood of Abel cried to 
heaven for vengeance on his brother, how much more will the blood 
of the lost soul cry for vengeance on its murderer. How cursed are 
they who are the cause of so great a calamity to another ! Tempta- 
tion and scandal are all the more fatal because the evil is handed 
on from one to another. He who has been led into sin, leads another 
into it in his turn, as the bird that the fowler has entrapped serves 
as a decoy to bring others into the snare. Like an avalanche, small 
in the beginning, but increasing in its course, carrying vast masses 
of snow with it into the abyss, the tempter drags countless souls with 
him to perdition. Others corrupt their fellow-men by the scandal 
they give, as leaven pervades the whole of the flour in which it is 
placed. 

Temptation is the endeavor, by subtle means, to incite a man 

to sin. 

The tempter is like the devil, who by his wiles, led our first parents 
in paradise to disobey God. He goes to work craftily, like the fisher- 
man who catches fish with a baited hook, or the fowler, who lays traps 
and spreads bird-lime to ensnare birds. In the case of almost all the 
holy martyrs before their execution, attempts were made to induce 
them, either by blandishments and promises, or by threats and tor- 
ture, to abjure their faith and transgress the commandment of God. 
What trouble the Proconsul took with the aged Bishop Polycarp; 
what efforts the King of Bohemia made to force St. John !N"epomucene 
to violate the seal of confession! He offered him a bishopric, he 



The Ten Commandments of Ood, 387 

put him to torture, and finally cast him into the Moldau. Those 
who dissuade others from what is good also deserve the name of 
tempter. Temptation is the devil's own work. He does not appear 
in person to seduce mankind, for then every one would recoil from 
him; he leaves men to do his business for him, and thus attains his 
end more certainly. 

Scandal is given when by some sinful word, deed, or omis- 
sion, we shock our neighbor, and perhaps cause him to sin. 

For instance, a man gives scandal if he is seen in public in a 
state of inebriation, if he talks indecent talk, makes use of oaths in 
the presence of children, eats meat openly on Friday, does servile 
work on Sunday, behaves indecorously in church, publishes ungodly 
books, decries religion and the ministers of religion in the papers 
and periodicals, etc. What he does instigates another to do the 
same; this is true most of all in regard to children, who are sure to 
imitate anything wrong which they see done by their parents or 
elders. He who gives scandal is like a man who digs a pit, into 
which another is likely to fall and break his neck. Scandal is an 
offence against the love of one's neighbor. That it is a mortal sin 
we gather from Our Lord's words concerning him who scandalizes 
others : " It were better for him that a mill-stone should be hanged 
about his neck and that he should be drowned in the depth of the 
sea" (Matt, xviii. 6). Again, Our Lord says that at the end of the 
world His angels shall gather out of His kingdom all who have 
given scandal, and cast them into the furnace of fire: there shall be 
weeping and gnashing of teeth (Matt. xiii. 41). But if the scandal 
given is slight, or unintentional, it is not a great sin, or is no sin at 
all. 

We ought, in as far as possible, to avoid giving scandal, and 
for this end we must observe the following rules: 

1. We ought to abstain from actions which are not only 
lawful, but good in themselves, which are of counsel but not 
of precept, if they may possibly give scandal. 

If any one is dispensed from the Friday abstinence on account of 
bad health, he should refrain from eating meat before others, if he 
knows that they will take scandal at it. And if this is impossible, 
he should explain to those who are at table with him why he eats it; 
if they take scandal then, he is not to blame. St. Paul declares: 
" If meat scandalize my brother, I will never eat flesh " (1 Cor. viii. 
13). And the aged Eleazar preferred death to even appearing to 
eat swine's flesh, lest young persons might be scandalized, and be 
deceived into thinking he was gone over to the life of the heathen 
^2 Mach. vi. 24). 

2. "We must, however, in no case omit any act which is com- 
iianded by God, even if others will take scandal at it; yet we 
should in as far as possible prevent the scandal by some words 
of explanation or instruction. 

By doing what the law of God enjoins on us, we do not give 



388 The Commandments, 

scandal, but on the contrary, a good example. The fault lies with the 
one who takes scandal at a good action; no one in fact will do so 
unless he be corrupted with vice. The obligations imposed by the 
laws of the Church, such as hearing Mass on Sundays, approaching 
the sacraments at Easter, may be set aside occasionally, if others 
will take offence by their observance; yet one should endeavor to 
obviate this, by explaining the duty to be fulfilled. Purely human 
laws do not bind as a rule, if great harm may be done by keeping 
them ; for Christ says : " My yoke is sweet and My burden is light " 
(Matt. xi. 30). Yet it is best to explain matters, and then act boldly; 
this often prevents difficulties being raised. It is, however, impossible 
always to avoid scandal, for evil-minded persons take offence at what 
is well meant. Our Lord bade His apostles not to heed sucl: people : 
" Let them alone ; they are blind and leaders of the blind " (Matt. xv. 
14). 

3. It is, however, lawful to wound or even to kill our fellow- 
man, if he threatens to take our life by violence, or anything that 
is absolutely indispensable to our life, and we have no other means 
of defence. This is called the right of self-defence. 

Self-defence is not wrong, because our object is not to take 
another man's life, but simply to preserve our own; and the moral 
worth of an action is determined by that which is, not by that which 
is not its object. We are permitted to defend, but by no means to 
avenge ourselves; hence if we can save ourselves by flight, we ought 
to do so. If it is enough to wound our adversary we must stop short 
there. Above all, a woman is justified in defending herself against 
any one who attempts to violate her chastity. We are also permitted 
to kill any one in order to save the life of a third party; this Moses 
did when he slew the Egyptian who was striking one of the He- 
brews (Exod. ii. 12). It is only lawful to put to death one who un- 
justly seizes our property, if he lays hands on what is absolutely nec- 
essary to our existence, for then it is our life that we are defending. 
It is not right to shoot a robber who carries off something of no 
great value; nor can we plead the right of self-defence if it is only 
our honor that is wrongfully attacked. 

The officers of justice are warranted in punishing evil-doers 
with death; and soldiers act lawfully in wounding and killing 
the enemy in time of warfare. 

The officers oi justice, in as far as they stand in the place of 
God, have the right to sentence evil-doers to capital punishment. 
St. Paul says the higher powers bear not the sword in vain, but as 
avengers to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil (Eom. xiii. 4). 
The authority of the magistrate is God's authority; when he condemns 
a criminal, it is not he who condemns him, but God, just as the sword 
is not answerable for the blow it strikes, but the hand is that wields 
the sword. Yet the judge must not act arbitrarily; he must only 
sentence the criminal to death when the welfare of society demands 
it. Human society is a body of which each individual is a member; 
and as a diseased limb has to be amputated in order to save the body, 
so criminals must be executed to save society. As a matter of course 



The Ten Commandments of God, 389 

the culprit's guilt must be proved; better let the guilty go free than 
condemn the innocent. It is an error to suppose that the Church 
advocates capital punishment on the principle of retaliation; an eye 
for an eye, a tooth for a tooth. This is a principle of Judaism, not of 
Christianity. The Church does not like to see blood shed, she desires 
that every sinner should have time to amend. She permits, but does 
not approve capital punishment. The military profession is not un- 
lawful ; we are not told in the Gospels that soldiers were exhorted to 
leave the army, but only that they were admonished to be content 
with their pay, and to do violence to no man. God, by the lips of 
Melchisedech, blessed Abraham after he had made war upon the 
kings who had robbed Lot (Gen. xiv.). Tbe soldier must not, how- 
ever, allow himself to treat cruelly those who are disabled in battle. 
The Church forbids her ministers to use deadly weapons, as this is 
incompatible with their sacred calling. 

4. He who has wrongfully injured his neighbor, either physi- 
cally or spiritually, is bound to repair the harm done to the utmost 
of his power. 

If any one has been the means of inflicting bodily harm upon his 
neighbor, he must pay the doctor and all the expenses of his illness, 
make good the loss of his earnings, etc. If he has killed him he must 
provide for his family. If he has given scandal to his neighbor, or 
led him into sin, he must strive to counteract the evil consequences 
by a good example, prayer, instruction, etc. Unless he does this he 
will not obtain pardon from God, and the priest's absolution will be 
invalid. 

What are the Reasons which ought to Deter us from Taking out 
own Life or that of our Neighbor? 

1. He who needlessly imperils or seeks to put an end to his 
own life, is often punished by God with acute bodily suffering 
here and sometimes by eternal damnation hereafter. 

We constantly read of fatalities and sad accidents resulting from 
foolhardiness in risking one's life. The indulgence of the passions 
also often brings on some painful malady. On the other hand some 
saints permanently injured themselves by excessive and unwise aus- 
terities and regretted it afterwards. 

2. He who takes the life of another is tortured by terrible 
pangs of conscience, often dies a violent death, and is everlast- 
ingly damned. 

Cain was a fugitive on the earth after the murder of his brother 
Abel (Gen. iv. 16). Murderers like him find no rest. As a rule, they 
die a violent death; either they are sentenced to death by the law, 
or they destroy themselves, or they fall by the hand of another. 
Whosoever shall shed man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed 
(Gen. ix. 6). All that take the sword shall perish by the sword (Matt. 
xxvi. 52). Divine justice frequently punishes the sinner in the way 
that he has sinned. The Hebrews in Egypt were commanded to 
throw their infants into the Nile; the king and all his army were 



390 The Commandments, 

swallowed up in the Red Sea. Retribution speedily overtook those 
who had condemned Our Lord to death : Judas and Pilate put an end 
to themselves, and in the year 70, no less than a million of the Jewish 
people were slain. The persecutors of the Christians in many cases 
died a violent death : Nero by his own hand, Julian the Apostate on 
the battle-field. Murderers shall not obtain the kingdom of God 
(Gal. V. 21) ; they shall have their portion in the pool burning with 
fire and brimstone (Apoc. xxi. 8). A similar fate has frequently been 
known to overtake heresiarchs, and those who by word or writings 
have undermined the faith of others, and thus incurred the guilt of 
spiritual murder. 

3. He who hates his neighbor loses his peace of mind, and 
becomes displeasing to God; his prayers are not heard, and his 
lot is eternal perdition. 

One who cherishes feelings of animosity and meditates vengeance 
is a stranger to peace ; he is continually in a ferment ; the thoughts, of 
his heart are a perpetual scourge to him. That man can have no 
concord with Christ, who lives in discord with Christians. If peace- 
makers are called the children of God, those who stir up strife and 
dissension are children of Satan. As long as the thorn rankles in the 
wound, no remedies will heal it, nor will prayer avail the Christian 
while deadly hatred holds a place in his heart. Our Lord says : " If 
thou offer thy gift at the altar, and there thou remember that thy 
brother hath anything against thee, leave there thy offering before 
the altar and go first to be reconciled to thy brother, and then coming 
thou shalt offer thy gift " (Matt. v. 23, 24). Feelings of hatred ought 
to be suppressed at once. Let not the sun go down upon your anger 
(Eph. iv. 26). A dislocated limb can easily be got back into its place, 
if this be done promptly, but if some time be allowed to elapse, it 
becomes a difficult matter to set it right. So it is with hatred; if 
a reconciliation takes place immediately, the former friendly feelings 
are restored without trouble; but if it is delayed, anger gets the 
mastery of us, and we think it beneath us to seek a reconciliation. 
" If," says St. Augustine, " thy dwelling were infested with snakes, 
thou wouldst hasten to rid thyself of them; now hatred and enmity 
are venomous serpents; wilt thou not banish them from thy heart, 
^hich is the temple of the Holy Ghost ? " 



S, OUR CONDUCT IN REGARD TO THE LOWER 
ANIMALS. 

The lower animals are created by God for the service of 
man. 

The benefits we derive from the animals are these : They supply us 
with what is essential to life, e.g., food, clothing, etc.; they help us 
in our work, they cheer us by their amusing ways, their song, their 
beauty, etc. Some instruct us by their example; bees, for instance, 
incite us to industry, storks to filial affection, sheep to the practice of 
patience, etc. Moreover they all proclaim the omnipotence, the wis- 
dom, the bounty of their Creator. 



The Ten Commandments of God, 391 

In our relations to animals it is our duty to care for their well- 
being, to refrain from tormenting them, not to kill any useful 
animal without a special reason, and finally not to treat them 
with exaggerated tenderness. 

We ought to take care for the well-being of animals. " The just 
regardeth the lives of his beasts, but the bowels of the wicked are 
cruel" (Prov. xii. 10). Those who keep animals are bound to provide 
them with necessary food, to keep them clean, and in good condition. 
Our Lord says : " !N"ot a sparrow shall fall on to the ground without 
your Father" (Matt. x. 29). This should teach us to care for the 
welfare of animals. Some treat brute beasts as if they had no feel- 
ing, overtaxing their powers, beating them unmercifully, not giving 
them enough to eat, or depriving them of the one day of rest out of 
the week which the law of God ordains for them (Exod. xx. 8-11). 
Those who have to kill animals for the table, and medical men who 
make experiments with them, ought to be careful to cause them no 
needless suffering. It is not right, either in the interests of science or 
for the sake of amusement, to give pain that can be avoided. Wanton 
cruelty is to be condemned ; so . is the destruction of harmless or 
useful animals. !N"oxious insects and dangerous animals must of 
course be killed, but others that are not hurtful, but rather useful, 
should be spared. Finally, animals are not to be pampered and petted 
over much. There are people who make an idol of some pet animal, 
preferring it to their fellow-man, and devoting every thought to it. 
Such persons resemble the ancient Egyptians, who worshipped cats, 
calves, bulls, etc. 

Men who are either cruel to animals or ridiculoTisly fond of 
them, often are very hard-hearted towards their fellow-men. 

Children who take pleasure in teasing animals torment men 
when they are grown up. All who were tyrants in after years, were 
cruel to animals in their youth. Criminals have sometimes confessed 
upon the scaffold that their course of crime began with torturing 
animals as children. On the other hand we often find people who 
pamper and show great affection for animals, utterly hard-hearted in 
regard to their neighbors. 

Both extremes, cruelty to animals and foolish fondness for 
them, are at variance with the order that God has established 
in the universe. 

To torture animals wantonly is an abuse of the sovereignty given 
to man by the Creator over the brute creation. Man thus becomes a 
tyrant, and sometimes it pleases God to make him suffer in the 
same way wherein he made beasts suffer. For instance, a peasant 
who used to strike his horses on a tender part of the foot, causing 
them intense pain, was later on crippled by gout in the feet, being con- 
fined to his bed for years. He then acknowledged and deplored his 
fault. The Areopagus of Athens once condemned a child to death 
who was guilty of wanton cruelty to animals, for they judged that no 
good could be expected of one who, at a tender age, displayed such 
evil qualities. Exaggerated fondness and solicitude for animals 
is also a violation of the appointed order of nature. 



392 The Commandments, 



THE SIXTH COMMAISTDMENT OF GOD. 

1. In the Sixth Commandment almighty God prohibits every- 
thing that might stain our own purity or that of our neighbor. 

One cannot enlarge upon sins against the Sixth Commandment, 
for the mere mention of what is impure takes the bloom off our inno- 
cence. Hence St. Paul exhorts the Ephesians: "All uncleanness, 
let it not so much as be named among you, as becometh saints " 
(Eph. V. 3). Nevertheless Holy Scripture warns the faithful re- 
peatedly and emphatically against these sins, so the Church cannot 
pass them by in silence. Eor this vice perhaps causes the destruc- 
tion of more souls than any other; in fact among the lost souls in 
hell, few will be found entirely free from it. 

God more especially forbids: 

1. Impure thoughts and desires. 

Evil thoughts are to be resisted both on account of their sinful- 
ness in themselves, and because they lead to immodest actions. They 
are like a spark which occasions a great conflagration, unless it be 
immediately extinguished. St. Jerome compares unchastity to a 
snake, whose head must be instantly crushed, before it can eject its 
deadly poison. Evil thoughts must accordingly be banished at once; 
this is done most readily by diverting the mind, or having recoiirse 
to prayer. (See what was said about temptation.) As long as evil 
thoughts are displeasing to us, they are not sinful; we are only to 
blame if we take pleasure in them. " Evil thoughts are an abomina- 
tion to the Lord" (Prov. xv. 26). One ought to flee from unchaste 
thoughts as one would flee from an assassin, for they cause the death 
of the soul. Impure thoughts, if entertained, give rise to impure 
desires, i.e., the wish or longing for the sin suggested. As the tree 
springs from the root, so evil actions spring from lust. Lust is the 
consent of the will, and this is as really sinful, as Our Lord says, as is 
the deed itself (Matt. v. 28). 

2. Impure words. 

A man whose conversation is unclean has a thoroughly polluted 
conscience. Unchaste words are a sure sign of unchaste manners. 
And those who take pleasure in listening to improper conversation, 
are in great danger of falling into sins of unchastity. St. Louis, 
on his death-bed, exhorted his son so to regulate his conversation, 
that if all the world heard what he said, he would not have cause to 
blush for it. " The tongue is indeed a little member, and boasteth 
great things" (Jas. iii. 5). "Many have fallen by the edge of the 
sword, but not so many as have perished by their own tongue" 
(Ecclus. xxviii. 22.) 

3. Impure actions. 

These acts are differently designated, according as they are com- 
mitted by the unmarried (Deiit. xxii. 21), the married (Lev. xx. 10), 
persons related to one another (1 Cor. v. 1), or as they are sins against 
nature (Kom. i. 26). 



The Ten Commandments of God. 393 

4. Immodest looks. 

Bold looks are forbidden, because they lead to sin, Just as a parent 
forbids his child to play with edged tools. The sin on which the eye 
looks with pleasure soon takes possession of the heart. " Many have 
perished by the beauty of a woman, and hereby lust is enkindled as 
a fire" (Ecclus. ix. 9). He who observes no custody of the eyes, is 
like a driver who pays no heed to his horses ; he will be carried away 
and dragged to destruction. Or like a fortress of which the gates 
are not guarded; the enemy soon effects an entrance through them. 
David would not have had so much to bewail, if he had kept watch 
over his eyes. " Look not round about thee in the ways of a city " 
(Ecclus. ix. 7). 

5. Looking at immodest pictures, going to improper plays, 
and reading books of an immoral tendency. 

Immodest pictures and plays corrupt more surely than impure 
conversation, because what one sees makes a deeper impression than 
what one hears. The indiscriminate reading of novels is tO' be 
avoided; there are many (and these are the most dangerous of all), 
which under a false semblance of propriety, kindle the passions, and 
thus do more harm than works of an openly immoral character. 

6. Immodesty in dress and excessive finery. 

Those who dress immodestly are the devil's instruments for the 
ruin of souls. Vanity and love of dress are powerful factors in 
Satan's service; for women who deck their person to attract men 
dare not presume to say that they are chaste and pure of heart ; their 
very appearance gives them the lie. The longing for admiration does 
not come from a simple heart; it is a snare to entrap others into 
vice. It is a bad sign for a woman to be overdressed ; those who make 
their toilet of paramount importance hold virtue cheap. "Let 
women adorn themselves with modesty and sobriety, not with plaited 
hair, or gold or pearls or costly attire" (1 Tim. ii. 0). 

2. Sins against the Sixth Commandment of God are for the 
most part very grievous in God^s sight and accordingly are se- 
verely punished by Him. 

Remember the Deluge and the fate of Sodom and Gomorrha. The 
chastisements God inflicts for the sin of unchastity have already 
been spoken of under the subject of the deadly sins. From the place 
given to the Sixth Commandment in the Decalogue it may be in- 
ferred that transgressions of this precept are on a par with murder 
and theft. Unhappily many of the plays performed in the theatre 
in the present day represent sins against the Sixth Commandment 
in an attractive light. 

THE SEVENTH COMMANDMEISTT OF GOD. 

1. In the Seventh Commandment almighty God forbids us to 
wrong our neighbor in his goods and property. 

By property is meant all that a man needs for his subsistence 



^94 The Commandments, 

and all that he possesses as his own: e.g., his money, clothes, pro- 
visions, house, land, etc. 



1. THE BIGHT OF POSSESSION, 

1. Earthly goods are necessary to man's subsistence, such as 
food, clothes, a dwelling-place, money, etc. 

1. Consequently every man is justified in striving to gain 
earthly goods after a just manner, and in possessing them as his 
personal property. 

Since it is the natural right of every man to preserve his own life, 
he is justified in gaining for himself and keeping as his own, those 
external goods which are indispensable to his existence. If every 
moment were occupied in providing for his own maintenance, he 
would be in the direst destitution, if sickness or misfortune befell 
him. The natural law prompts him to provide for such contingen- 
cies. Besides, were every moment engrossed with the business of self- 
maintenance, there would be no time to attend to his eternal inter- 
ests. Furthermore, a man is bound to provide for those who are de- 
pendent upon him, and this he could not do if he himself lived from 
hand to mouth. God commanded our first parents in paradise to " fill 
the earth and subdue it" (Gen. i. 28). Cain and Abel had separate 
possessions; each brought of his own to offer sacrifice. All trust- 
worthy information respecting the earliest ages of humanity bears 
evidence to the possession of personal property. It was necessary 
that each should have his own, otherwise mankind could not have 
been at peace. There would have been continual strife and conten- 
tion. Without the right of possession, the incentive to labor would 
be wanting. The holding of property is therefore an ordinance of 
God, just as much as marriage and legal authority. But it cannot be 
said that the distribution of wealth, as it is under existing circum- 
stances, is in accordance with the will of God. It could not be His 
will that a small minority should enjoy a superfluity, while an over- 
whelming majority of His children should live in poverty and destitu- 
tion. This great inequality is the result of sin. 

2. Personal property is justly obtained when it is either ac- 
quired by labor or by gift. 

Nature does not give man the right to certain goods ; the right to 
possess them must be acquired. It is acquired in the first place by 
labor. God has ordained that the earth should not yield what is 
requisite for the maintenance of human life without cultivation. 
It is a violation of all justice to deprive the cultivator of the soil 
of what he has won by the sweat of his brow (Lev. xiii.). If the 
earth is the Lord's and all they that dwell therein, because He is the 
Maker of it, that which man has made must rightly belong to him. 
Property as a rule, is gained by work, but sometimes it is a free gift. 
God Himself bestows property. He promised the land of Chanaan to 
Abraham and his posterity as a possession (Gen. xii. 7). The patri- 
archs bequeathed their possessions to their eldest sons by a solemn 



The Ten Commandments of God, 395 

benediction. In the present day lands and property of all kinds pass 
into the hands of others by inheritance or bequest. Every man 
should make a will, in order to prevent disputes should he be suddenly 
called out of this life. In primitive times property was acquired by 
taking possession of unowned land ; and now valuables, if unclaimed, 
may be appropriated by their finder. 

1. On the other hand^ this commandineiit forbids the ac- 
quisition of property by unjust means, i.e., by taking away what 
belongs to our neighbor. 

Property is unjustly acquired by theft, robbery, cheating, etc. 

2. The State has not the right to take from any man his 
personal property, but it is empowered to impose restrictions 
on the acquisition and disposal of personal property. 

The State has not a paramount command over all property. It 
has a certain right of supervision, but not of disposal. The people 
do not exist for the Government, but the Government exists for the 
people ; consequently far from wronging any man, it ought to aim at 
the welfare of each and all of its subjects. Therefore if the State 
compels an individual to give up his property in the public interest, 
it is bound to give him compensation. iNTor has the State the right 
to seize ecclesiastical property. To rob a man is theft, to rob God 
is sacrilege, and for this the penalty is excommunication. Kestitu- 
tion must be made before the Holy See can give absolution. Since 
it is the business of the secular authorities, under God, to provide 
for the well-being of their subjects, the Government is empowered by 
wise legislation, to introduce gradual changes in regard to the hold- 
ing of property. It can impose such taxes as are necessary for the 
common weal upon its subjects, in proportion to their means. Thus 
by heavy taxation of wealthy capitalists it can alleviate the poverty 
of the working classes. Moreover, St. Thomas Aquinas says this 
world's riches are only intended for the preservation of human life. 
This end is not attained if they are already in the possession of indi- 
viduals ; therefore every one is bound of his abundance to assist those 
who are in want. The superfluity of the rich is the property 
of the poor. Thus the Government, in exercising its right of 
guardianship, can do something towards the just distribution of 
superfluous wealth. 

Sins against the Seventh Commandment. 

The Seventh Commandment expressly forbids; Theft, robbery, 
cheating, usury, injuring the property of another, detention of 
goods that have been found or lent, and the non-payment of debts. 

1. Theft is the secret purloining of another man's goods con- 
trary to the rational will of their owner. 

Judas was a thief; he had the purse, and appropriated a part of the 
common money (John xii. 6). Few sins are more common than 
theft, and this fact may be accounted for in the first place by the 



396 The Commandments. 

covetousness of the human heart, and also by the abundant opportu 
nities afforded for stealing. Occasion makes the thief. But if a man 
steal when he is starving, or as the only means of saving his life in. 
an extremity, it is not to be reckoned as a sin, provided he has the 
intention to restore what he has stolen when he is in better circum- 
stances (Prov. vi. 30). Our Lord did not rebuke the apostles when, 
in passing through a cornfield, they plucked the ears of corn and eat 
the grain because they were hungry (Matt. xii. 1). To conceal or 
purchase goods that are known to be stolen is to render one's self a 
partner in the sin. 

2. Robbery is theft accompanied by personal violence. 

If a robber kills, or mortally wounds his victim, the crime is said 
to be robbery with murder. Of this the robbers were guilty who 
attacked the Jew on the way from Jerusalem to Jericho (Luke x. 
30). The forcible extortion of alms is also equivalent to robbery. 

3. Cheating consists in injuring one's neighbor in his pos- 
sessions by crafty means. 

For instance, by the use of false weights and measures, the issue 
of counterfeit coin, the adulteration of food, the falsification of doc- 
uments, the removal of boundary-marks, smuggling, or arson in view, 
of obtaining the insurance money. " Let no man overreach, or cir-« 
cnmvent his brother in business" (1 Thess. iv. 6). 

4. Usury consists in making use of the needy circumstances 
of another to one's own profit (Exod. xxii. 25). 

The usurer is called a money-lender, if he lends money at a high! 
rate of interest to one who is in pecuniary difficulties, or a speculator, 
if he buys up corn and keeps it until a time of scarcity, in order to 
sell it at a high price. Under the appearance of helping a man in 
need, the usurer involves him in greater complications. He is like 
a doctor who instead of strengthening his patient, saps the little force 
he had; or like a spider that weaves a web more and more closely 
round the unhappy fly and sucks every drop of its blood. Usurers arei 
murderers of the poor; they take from them their means of liveli-* 
hood, and thus deprive them of life. 

5. Wilfully injuring another man's property, keeping back 
what one has found or what has been lent to one, and refusing 
to pay one's debts, is equivalent to stealing. 

We may injure our neighbor in his property by setting it on fire, 
by treading down his crops, damaging his goods, fishing or shooting 
on his grounds without permission, etc. To keep what one has found, 
and not to return what has been lent to the owner is theft. Joseph's 
brethren did well in directly taking back the money they found in 
their sacks. The more valuable the object one finds, the greater the 
obligation to give it up to the owner; and if one does not know to 
whom it belongs, one ought to take steps to discover him. Many 
people are very careless in returning books, instruments or imple- 
ments which they have borrowed, and they show displeasure if the 
owner asks for them. Be careful about lending and very careful 



The Ten Oommandments of God, 397 

about returning. The non-payment of debts also is a kind of stealing. 
It is a bad thing to get into debt ; the debtor is like a man who, when 
his legs begin to fail him, hobbles onward with a crutch. But it is a 
sin to borrow and not pay again (Ps. xxxvi. 21). Many people get 
into debt to satisfy their craving for amusement, to gratify their 
passions, or for the sake of dressing above their station, and they 
scarcely think this wi'ong. Tradespeople sin when they fraudulently 
declare themselves bankrupts. But most blameworthy of all are those 
who do not pay their servants and workpeople ; this is a sin that cries 
to heaven. It is theft, and a sort of murder, too, to keep back the 
wages of a poor laborer, who lives on his daily earnings. " The wages 
of him that hath been hired by thee shall not abide with thee until 
the morning" (Lev. xix. 13). "Pay him the price of his labor the 
same day " (Deut. xxiv. 15). " Owe no man anything, but to love one 
another" (Kom. xiii. 8). 

1. We are in danger of committing mortal sin if we take from 
our neighbor as much as he requires to support him one day in 
a manner suitable to Ms position. 

Our sin against our neighbor is greater or less in proportion to 
the wrong we do him. To steal a few pence from one who is utterly 
destitute, or a few shillings from a laboring man is a mortal sin; 
it is equivalent to stealing a considerable sum from a rich man. It 
is also a sin to take trifling sums repeatedly from the same person, 
for in time they make a large amount. One ought not to take the 
smallest thing that is not one's own. Fidelity in small things is most 
important, for God punishes little sins, and unfaithfulness in small 
t-iings leads to grave sins. By disregarding petty thefts many a 
criminal has come to the gallows. 



2. RESTITUTION OR SATISFACTION. 

1. He who has purloined from his neighbor or wronged him 
in his property, is under a strict obligation to restore the stolen 
foods or make compensation for the damage done (Lev. vi. 1-5). 

A thief is not required to go himself and restore the stolen prop- 
erty to its owner; he may send it by the priest, who is pledged to 
secrecy, and will give him an acknowledgment of its receipt. On one 
occasion when Clement Hofbauer, the apostle of Vienna, handed 
over something that had been stolen to its owner, the latter refused 
to take it; but Hofbauer rejoined: "It is not wise to allow the thief 
to retain what he has purloined, or he will think stealing no great 
offence." 

The following rules are to be observed: 

1. If the rightful owner of the stolen property is dead, it 
must be given to his heirs; and if there should be no heirs, it 
must be given to the poor or devoted to good works. 

2. If the thief cannot restore the whole, he must at anv rate 
restore as much as he can. 



898 The Commandments, 

3. If poverty or other hindrances render the thief unable to 
make restitution immediately, he must at least resolve to do so 
as soon as possible, and he must make every effort to fulfil that 
resolution. 

4. If the thief cannot restore even a part of what he has 
stolen, he ought at least to pray for the individual he has 
wronged. 

2. If any one has unwittingly got stolen goods in Ms posses- 
sion, he is bound to give them up to the rightful owner as soon 
as he becomes aware that they were stolen. 

Thus any one who, whether by purchase or gift, has acquired pos- 
session of something that was stolen, ought to give it back to its 
owner. If he does not know that it was stolen, he is said to be a just 
possessor, but if he does, then he is an unjust possessor. If the 
former be the case, not only must the stolen property itself be re- 
stored, but also whatever may have been gained by it without any 
labor on his part; if the latter, any loss the rightful proprietor may 
have sustained through the loss of his property must also be made 
good. At any rate it is well to refer the matter to one's con- 
fessor, and follow his counsel, for he stands towards us in the place 
of God. 

3. He who refuses either to give up the stolen property or to 
compensate for the loss sustained, will not obtain pardon of his 
sins from God, nor absolution from the priest. 

" He that will not render what he hath robbed, shall die everlast- 
ingly" (Ezech. xxxiii. 15). It was not until Zacheus had declared 
his determination to make full restitution of all unjust gains, that 
Our Lord called him a son of Abraham (Luke xix. 9). As long as one 
who has wronged his neighbor refuses to make reparation, though he 
entreats the divine pardon with tears, though he seeks to appease the 
divine justice by fasts and penances, his sin will not be remitted. 
" Such a one," St. Augustine says, " does not do penance, but only 
counterfeits it." Without restitution there is no forgiveness. St. 
Alphonsus relates the story of a rich man who had gangrene in the 
arm, and was near death. The priest urged him to restore the prop- 
erty he had acquired unjustly; he refused on the plea that by doing 
so he would leave his three sons penniless. The priest bethought 
him of a stratagem. He said he knew of a means of cure, but it was 
a costly one. The sick man declared no sum would be too great to 
procure it. The priest replied that some living person must allow 
his hand to be burned and while raw, laid on that of the sufferer. 
The three sons were called, but neither of them would do this for 
their father. Then the priest said : " See, none of your children 
would hold his hand in the fire a few moments for you, and you are 
willing to endure the tortures of hell-fire to all eternity for their 
sakes." This opened the sick man's eyes; he went to confession and 
made restitution. 



The Ten Commandments of Ood, 399 

What are the Reasons which ought to Deter us from Transgress* 
ing the Seventh Commandment? 

The heathens of old held theft in abhorrence, and punished it 
very severely. The Anglo-Saxons (in the sixth century) used to cut 
off the hands of thieves; in Hungary they were sold as slaves. The 
Jews inflicted condign retribution on a thief; the man who at the 
taking of Jericho in spite of the prohibition carried away some of 
the spoil, was stoned to death by God's command (Josue vii.). In 
former days the laws of the Church in regard to the sin of stealing 
were extremely rigorous; even for a petty theft restitution had to 
be made, and besides it was expiated by fasting for a year on bread 
and water. God Himself inflicts heavy chastisements on those v%'ho 
take what belongs to another, no matter how trifling the thing 
stolen; for whether it be great or small, the will to defraud is the 
same, and it is to the will that He looks. 

People who wrong their neighbor in his property generally come 
to shame and poverty, often die unrepentant, and are in danger 
of everlasting damnation. 

Confusion is upon a thief (Ecclus. v. 17). Stealing does not 
bring a man to honor, but to prison. Thieves are generally caught, 
sooner or later. Stealing is the way to poverty. Ill-gotten goods 
bring no blessing. He who steals another man's goods will lose his 
own, for when that which he acquired unjustly is taken from him, 
that which was honestly acquired will go too. Stolen goods are 
like fire, which not only vanishes in smoke, but reduces everything 
near it to ashes. When the Jews returned from the Babylonian cap- 
tivity, there was great scarcity in the land. Some of the people 
profited by it to become rich ; but when iSTehemias came from Babylon 
to Jerusalem he was exceedingly angry, and rebuked the usurers. 
He shook his clothes before all the people, and called upon God to 
shake every man out of his house and out of his possessions, who 
did not restore what had been unjustly exacted, so that what he had 
got by usury might vanish as the dust (2 Esd. v. 1-13). "He that 
soweth iniquity shall reap evils " (Prov. xxii. 8). " The riches of the 
unjust shall be dried up like a river " (Ecclus. xl. 13). " Woe to him 
that heapeth together that which is not his own" (Hab. ii. 6). In- 
justice is even the cause of the fall of whole nations (Ecclus. x. 8). 
Where are the ancient and mighty kingdoms of Babylon, of the 
Medes and Persians, of the Greeks, and the great empire of Rome? 
They came to ruin because they sought to extend their limits un- 
justly. Look at the state of Italy in the present day ; since the Holy 
Father was robbed of his temporal possessions the taxation has been 
excessive, and a large portion of the population are starving. Fur- 
thermore thieves often come to a miserable end. Pemember Judas' 
wretched fate ; what misery of mind, what torture of soul he endured 
before he hanged himself in despair! (Matt, xxvii. 5.) Those who 
have stolen or embezzled money are rarely brought to repentance, 
because they are unwilling to restore what they have taken. Even 
upon their death-bed they will not hear of making restitution. Be- 
ware, therefore, of allowing yourself to touch what belongs to anoth/»T 



400 The Commandments, 

Moreover, if at the Last Day he will find no mercy who has not given 
of his substance to the needy, how much the more pitilessly will he 
be judged who has actually taken from his neighbor what was his 
(St. Augustine). Thieves and the covetous shall not possess the king- 
dom of God (2 Cor. vi. 10). The Mohammedans consider that he 
who so much as plucks an ear of corn from his neighbor's cornfield, 
has done a disgraceful thing, and will go to hell. The dread of ever- 
lasting damnation deters many from committing acts of injustice. 
Of this the following story affords an example. A poor widow who 
had been defrauded of a plot of land belonging to her by a rich man, 
asked to be at least allowed to carry away a basket of earth. The man 
consented with a scornful smile; when the basket was filled, she fur- 
ther requested him to help her up with it on to her back. The rich 
man attempted to raise it, but it was too heavy for him to lift. 
" There," said the widow, " if you find this basket of earth too great a 
weight, how will you bear the burden of the whole field for all eter- 
nity ? ' ' This remark made such an impression on the rich man that 
he gave the land back to the woman. Fools indeed are they who play 
away their chance of heaven for the sake of earth's transitory riches ! 
" What doth it profit a man if he gain the whole world, and suffer the 
loss of his own soul? " (Matt. xvi. 26.) By stealing you may obtain 
money, but you lose God. You think of the gain; forget not the 
loss. 

The honest man will prosper upon earth (Ps. xxxvi. 25). 

Tobias affords a model of upright conduct. Although he was blind 
and reduced to poverty, when he heard the bleating of a kid that 
had been given to his wife, he immediately said : " Take heed, lest 
perhaps it be stolen; restore ye it to its owners, for it is not lawful 
for us either to eat or to touch anything that cometh by theft " (Tob. 
ii. 21). God restored him to sight, and he lived forty- two years 
longer (Tob. xiv. 1). The Lord will not afflict the soul of the just 
with famine (Prov. x. 3). His ears are open unto his prayers (Ps. 
xxxiii. 16). Justice exalteth a nation (Prov. xiv. 34). Honesty is the 
best policy. 

THE EIGHTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

In the Eighth Commandment God forbids us to detract from our 
neighbor's honor, or bear false witness of any kind 

1. TRE PROHIBITION AGAINST INJURING OUR 
NEIGHBOR IN HIS HONOR. 

1. A good reputation is a precious possession, for it enables 
us to gain riches for time and for eternity. 

An honorable reputation, or a good name, consists in being well 
thought of, and well-spoken of by our fellow-men. The opposite of 
honor is shame. " A good name is better than great riches ; and good 
favor is above silver and gold" (Prov. xxii. 1). A good reputation is 
the best thing on earth ; it is a talent entrusted to us by God, for he 
who has a good reputation can do a great deal of good, because he 
has influence over others. The esteem of others is essential to real 



The Ten Commandments of God, 401 

nappiness; who can enjoy his life if he knows that he is despised 
by his fellow-men? A man without a penny will often get an ex- 
cellent post merely because he has a good character. And those 
who are highly thought of are more careful to lead an upright life 
than those who have no reputation to preserve. An honorable name 
is to a man what the peel is to an apple; while it is whole, the apple 
keeps sound for a long time, but if the skin is once cut, the fruit 
rots quickly. 

2. Above all we ought to strive to acquire a good name 
among men, and for that reason we ought to let our good works 
be known, and we ought to defend our character if it be aspersed 
to any great extent. 

It is God's will that we should strive after honor, for He im- 
planted within us feelings of honor and an abhorrence of disgrace. 
To suppress this instinct would be to act at variance with His ap- 
pointment. Hence we ought to perform our good works openly. Out 
Lord expressly enjoins this upon us when He says : " So let your light 
shine before men that they may see your good works and glorify your 
Father Who is in heaven " (Matt. v. 16). Our good works should be 
like a sweet odor, pleasing to men as a perfume is to the nostrils 
(2 Cor. ii. 15). Good works are the best means of defending our good 
name, and silencing the tongue of detractors (1 Pet. ii. 12). We 
ought to consider what may be good not only before God, but also 
before men (2 Cor. viii. 21). "Let your modesty be known unto all 
men" (Phil. iv. 5). "From all appearance of evil refrain your- 
selves " (1 Thess. V. 22). It need hardly be said that our good works 
must not be performed in view of pleasing men, and courting their 
praise, or we shall receive no reward from God (Matt. vi. 2). It is 
our duty to defend ourselves when our name is aspersed. All manner 
of accusations were brought against the early Christians; some of 
their ablest men published " apologies " and sent them to the emperor. 
Our Lord did not disdain to justify Himself, when, for in- 
stance, it was said of Him that He cast out devils by the aid of the 
prince of the devils (Matt. xii. 27) ; or again, when a servant of the 
high priest struck Him (John xviii. 23). St. Paul repeatedly spoke 
in his own defence, before the council and the governor (Acts xxii. 
26). Yet it is not well to be over-sensitive about one's honor, and go 
to law about trifles. An amicable adjustment of differences and 
reconciliation, is better than quarrelling and bringing accusations. To 
be very touchy in regard to one's honor is likely to give an appearance 
of truth to the slander, for it looks as if we were not quite sure of 
ourselves; besides it provokes the calumniator to go to greater 
lengths. After all, a man whose life is without reproach need not 
fear the permanent loss of his good name ; only the evildoer, if he fall 
into disgrace, cannot retrieve his character. It is just the same as 
with one's hair; shave it off and it grows again quickly; but if it is 
pulled out by the roots, the bare place remains. David rightly com- 
pares the tongue of the slanderer to a sharp razor. In the matter 
of self-defence one must know how to keep the medium. Strong 
and generous characters are not affected by trifles; they bear them in 
silence, only giving expression to their just anger in matters of im- 



402 The Comma ndmenfs,' 

portance. St. Francis of Sales tells us that only when grare and dig- 
graceful crimes are imputed to us, such as no man can allow himself 
to be charged with, should we take steps to clear ourselves. Finally, 
be it remarked, much more can be done by bearing an affront 
patiently than by displaying great anxiety about our good name. 
Many eminent servants of God, by the calmness with which they bore 
the revilings of godless men, were the means of converting their 
accusers. 

Yet we ought not to strive too anxiously to obtain the esteem 
of men, or else we shall lose the friendship of God as well as 
the esteem of men; moreover in some cases it is impossible to 
enjoy at the same time the favor of God and the favor of men. 

He who is over-solicitous to obtain honor among men, makes this, 
and not God, his chief aim. Such a one is arrogant and ambitious, 
and will consequently be humbled by God (Luke xiv. 11). How 
deeply the proud Absalom was humbled! Likewise the ambitious 
Emperor IsTapoleon. Honor is a capricious goddess: if we run after 
her, she flies from us; if we fly from her, she pursues us. She allows 
no force to be put upon her ; but there is a price at which she may be 
purchased, and that is uprightness and humility. It is impossible 
to serve God and to please men (Gal. i. 10). All who lead a truly 
Christian life are despised and reviled by men (1 Cor. iv. 13; 1 Pet. 
iv. 14), and even counted as fools (1 Cor. iv. 10). There are some 
silly people who mete out honor or disgrace not by the standard of 
virtue, but by things that are of no real value ; riches, position, dress, 
etc. But whatever your exertions, you cannot please at all times, and 
all persons. 

3. Furthermore, we ought to refrain from everything that may 
wound our neighbor's honor. Thus suspicion, detraction, slander, 
and abuse are forbidden, also listening with pleasure when our 
neighbor is spoken against. 

Suspicion implies malice of heart; detraction, slander (both of 
which are directed against the absent) and abuse (which is directed 
against one who is present), are sins of the tongue; listening with 
gratification when another is evilly spoken of, is a sin, if it is in the 
evil speaking that we take pleasure. 

1. Suspicion consists in supposing evil of one's neighbor 
without reasonable grounds. 

The Pharisee in the Temple took for granted that the publican 
was a sinner and how greatly he was mistaken (Luke xviii.) ! Job's 
three friends thought he must needs be ungodly merely because he 
was afllicted by God. Simon the Pharisee thought the Magdalen, 
when he saw her at Our Lord's feet, was still a sinner, but he deceived 
himself; she was then a penitent (Luke vii. 39 seq.). When St. Paul, 
shipwrecked on the island of Malta, lighted a fire, a viper, coming out 
of the sticks, fastened on his hand; in consequence of this the inhab- 
itants of the island instantly judged him to be a murderer, pursued 
by divine vengeance (Acts xxviii.). A goldsmith had an apprentice 



Tli& Ten Commandments of God, 403 

who bore a very good character. One day he found two precious 
stones concealed in a hole in the wall close to the boy's head. He 
directly accused him of theft, chastised him soundly, and drove him 
out of the house. Soon after he again discovered two stones in ex- 
actly the same place. He watched, and found they were put there 
by a magpie which he had in the house, and deeply regretted his 
rash judgment, when it was too late to repair his fault. If he had 
detected the boy in dishonesty, he would not have done wrong in sus- 
pecting him. People judge of others by themselves ; for the affections 
are apt to mislead the understanding. He who is not evil himself 
does not lightly think evil of others, whereas a bad man readily con- 
cludes his neighbor to be as bad as himself. Molten metal takes the 
shape of the mould into which it is poured; so every man's judgment 
of what he sees and hears takes its shape from his own feelings. The 
most wholesome aliments disagree with the man whose digestion is 
out of order; thus a corrupted mind always takes an evil view of 
things, while a good man puts the best construction on everything. 
" I would far rather err," says St. Anselm, " by thinking good of a 
bad man than by thinking evil of a good man." " Charity thinketh 
no evil " (1 Cor. xiii. 5). The just man, in whom dwells the spirit of 
love, even when he sees an action which is unquestionably reprehen- 
sible, does not allow his thoughts to dwell on it ; he leaves the judg- 
ment of it to God. This is what St. Joseph did, in regard to his 
spouse, the Blessed Virgin (Matt. i. 19). "Let none of you imagine 
evil in your heart against his friend" (Zach. viii. 17). Trust others, 
if you would have others trust you. Trust engenders confidence, and 
mistrust the want of it. 

2. Detraction consists in disclosing the fault committed by 
another without necessity. 

This sin, the lessening of our neighbor's reputation, is an act of 
injustice towards him. For if he is really guilty of some secret sin, 
still he has not lost the good opinion of others, and of this we rob 
him if we publish his misdeeds. We are not justified in robbing a 
man of the esteem he enjoys, even though he has no right to it, any 
more than in taking from him money which he has gained unjustly. 
Nor must we speak evil of the dead. Let nothing but what is good be 
said of the departed. Some people, like hyenas, who tear from their 
graves and devour dead bodies, deface the memory of the dead by 
their malicious words and bring to light faults long since forgotten. 
Like insects which alight, not on the sound part of the apple, but on 
the decayed portion, detractors do not enlarge on the virtues of the 
deceased, but they pitilessly dwell upon their faults. They may be 
compared to dogs who prefer carrion to fresh meat, for they pass over 
the good which they cannot help seeing in their neighbor, and care 
to keep alive the remembrance of his failings. The sin of detrac- 
tion is one most frequently met with. " Rarely," says St. Jerome, 
" do we find any one who is not ready to blame his neighbor's con- 
duct." This comes from pride, for many people imagine they exalt 
themselves in proportion as they decry others. Detraction is a 
hateful sin. It is an ugly and shameless thing to do, if one goes to 
a stranger's house and spies into every corner; but how much 
more so to scrutinize and criticize our neighbor's course of lifel 



404 The Commandments, 

Mud should be covered over, not stirred up, for no one can touch it 
without defiling himself. " O fool ! " exclaims St. Alphonsus. " Thou 
dost declaim against the sin of another, and meanwhile, by evil 
speaking, dost commit a far greater sin than that thou blamest in 
thy neighbor." Besides the detractor in disclosing the faults of 
another, discloses his own, for he shows that he has no charity. How- 
ever, to speak of another man's sin is not wrong, unless one has the 
intention of lowering him in the eyes of others; it is not detraction 
to tell some one else of it in order to prevent a repetition of the sin. 
One may also blame the fault of another, if this may be useful to 
a third person; but it must be done from a sense of duty, and the 
t\n rather than the sinner is to be condemned. The crime of any 
lalefactor who has been brought to justice may be freely spoken of, 
as it is already made public. Tale-telling is a form of detraction; 
it consists in repeating to another what a third person has said of 
him. Tale-telling ruins the peace of families, and is a fruitful 
source of feuds. It is worse than ordinary detraction because it 
not only destroys the reputation of one's neighbor, but puts an 
end to friendly relations and brotherly love. Therefore God says: 
" The whisperer and double-tongued are accursed " (Ecclus. xxviii. 
15). 

3. Slander consists in attributing to one's neighbor faults 
of which he is not guilty. If the accusation is made publicly 
it is called a libel. 

Slander or calumny is taking away a man's good name. Puti- 
phar's wife accused Joseph to her lord of having attempted to lead 
her astray (Gen. xxxix.). The Jews accused Our Lord before Pilate 
of having perverted the nation and forbidden to give tribute to the 
emperor (Luke xxiii. 2). Exaggeration of another's fault also comes 
under the head of calumny. The motives that actuate the slanderer 
are generally revenge, hatred or ingratitude; his sin is twofold, for 
he lies, and at the same time destroys his neighbor's reputation. 
" He that backbiteth secretly is like a serpent that biteth in silence." 
Some slanderers accompany their calumnies with a jest, or accentuate 
them with a witty or amusing speech. This is the greatest cruelty 
of all, for the slander which might have passed in at one ear and 
out at the other, is then firmly lodged in the mind of all who hear it. 
Again, slanders that are prefaced by words of eulogy make more 
impression on the hearer, just as an arrow flies with more force and 
penetrates more deeply if the bow be drawn back first. Of such 
persons David says : " The poison of asps is under their lips " (Ps. 
xiii. 3). 

4. Abuse consists in making public the low opinion which 
one has of another. 

In evil speaking one makes known a man^s fault behind his back, 
abuse utters it in his presence. Abuse therefore stands in the same 
relation to detraction as robbery to theft. While detraction and 
slander undermine the good opinion others have of a man, abuse 
aims at depriving him of the outward respect that is shown him. 
Semei reviled King David ; he called him a man of Belial, and threv? 



The Ten Commantotnents of God. 405 

stones at him (2 Kings xvi. 5). The Jews reviled Our Lord; they 
called Him a Samaritan, and said He had a devil (John viii. 48). 
If two men quarrel, the one who is in the wrong usually resorts to 
abuse. The one who is in the right does not need such weapons; 
truth conquers of itself. Sneers and sarcasms are a form of this 
sin. Their object is to make a man ridiculous before others and put 
him to confusion. By such unkind speeches one may deeply wound 
one's neighbor, and fill him with bitter resentment. " The stroke of 
a whip maketh a blue mark, but the stroke of the tongue will break 
the bones" (Ecclus. xxviii. 21). 

6. He who takes pleasure in listening to aetraction commits 
the same sin as the speaker to whom he listens. 

He who asperses his neighbor's good name kindles a fire, and he 
who listens to him throws fuel on it. Were it not for the latter, the 
former would soon be silent. St. Ignatius says we should not talk 
about our neighbor's faults did we not find eager listeners. St. Ber- 
nard says he cannot decide which is more blameworthy, the man who 
slanders his neighbor, or he who lends his ear to the slanderer; the 
only difference is that one serves the devil with his tongue, the other 
with his ear. What do I care to know that such a one is a wicked 
man? The knowledge only does me harm. How much better to spend 
one's pains on scrutinizing one's own conduct. Our Lord exhorts us 
to do this : " Cast first the beam out of thine own eye, and then thou 
shalt see clearly to take out the mote from thy brother's eye " (Luke 
vi. 42). It is those who are blind to their own faults who are most 
keenly alive to the faults of others. Never listen to detraction. St. 
Augustine had these words inscribed upon his dining-table : " There 
is not place at this table for those who love to defame their neighbor." 
" Hedge in thy ears with thorns, hear not a wicked tongue " (Ecclus. 
xxviii. 28). Slander is a three-edged sword; at one blow it inflicts 
three wounds; it wounds the slanderer, for he commits a sin; it 
wounds the slandered, because he is robbed of his good name; it 
wounds the hearer, for he also falls into sin. And since the slan- 
derer injures the soul of him who listens to his calumny, he imitates 
the serpent, whose poisoned words were the means of driving Eve 
out of paradise. 

4. He who has injured his neighbor's reputation is strictly 
bound to restore his good name; either by apologizing, if the 
offence was committed in private, or by publicly retracting his 
words, if they were spoken before others. 

Any one who has unjustly diminished his neighbor's reputation, 
is bound to make satisfaction, according to the nature of the offence. 
It is not enough to draw the arrow out of the wound, the hurt must 
be healed; nor is it enough to desist from evil-speaking; the injury 
done must be set right. That is bitter to human nature, for it re- 
quires no slight self-humiliation. Moreover, it is almost impossible 
fully to make amends for calumny; it is easy to break a seal, 
but difiicult to repair it so that no one can perceive that it has been 
broken. An ink-spot is soon made on a sheet of paper, but no efforts 
will remove all traces of the blot. 



406 The Oa9nma7idments. 

5. Those who do not endeavor to repair the harm they have 
done by slandering their neighbor, cannot obtain pardon from 
God, nor absolution from the priest. 

What are the Reasons which should Deter us from Injuring 
our Neighhor^s Good Name f 

1. He who is severe in his judgment of his neighbor, will in 
his turn be judged severely by God. 

Our Lord says : " Judge not, that you may not be judged " (Matt, 
vii. 1). "For with what measure you mete, it shall be measured to 
you again" (v. 2). " Condemn not and you shall not be condemned " 
(Luke yi. 3T). A monk who on account of delicate health had not 
been very regular in the performance of his religious duties, dis- 
played great cheerfulness when his dea'h drew near. On being asked 
the cause of this, he replied : " I have never judged any one, even when 
I had just cause for complaint; therefore I hope that God will not 
judge me." 

2. To judge one's fellow-man is to commit an offence against 
God, for it is an usurpation of His rights. 

" There is one Lawgiver and Judge ; but who art thou that judgest 
thy neighbor?" (Jas. iv. 12.) "Who art thou that judgest another 
man's servant ? " (Eom. xiv. 4.) Only He Who is omniscient can claim 
the right to judge others, for the intrinsic evil of an action depends 
upon the intention of the heart, and that is hidden from man. 

3. He who robs another of his good name is often severely 
punished by God upon earth; not unfrequentlj he is overtaken 
by the same calamity which he sought to bring on his neighbor. 

A man of evil tongue shall not be established upon the earth 
(Ps. cxxxix. 12). Jezabel, the wife of King Achab, suborned two 
wicked men to falsely accuse iN'aboth, who would not give np his 
vineyard to the king, of blasphemy. Ketribution eventually fell 
upon her; she was thrown from the palace window, trampled upon 
by horses and eaten by dogs (3 Kings xxi.). It is now no imcommon 
thing for the slanderer to meet with the self-same fate which ho 
prepared for another, as the following story shows: St. Elizabeth. 
Queen of Portugal, had a favorite page, who used to distribute her 
alms. One of the king's servants, who was jealous of the large share 
of the queen's favor enjoyed by that page, calumniated him to the 
king, one day when he was out hunting. The king believed the 
calumny ; and going up to a lime-kiln which he saw in the forest, he 
said to the proprietor : " To-morrow I shall send a young man hither, 
who will ask you whether you have executed the king's orders; seize 
him instantly and cast him into the kiln." On the following morning 
the king dispatched the queen's page to the lime-burner with the 
message agreed upon. On his way thither the young man passed a 
church, and as the bell was ringing for Mass, he went in and 
assisted at the holy sacrifice. Meanwliilo the servant who liad slan- 
dered him, curious to know his fate, followed him, as he thought, to 



The Ten Oommandments of Ood, 407 

the lime-kiln, and on arriving, eagerly asked if the king's orders had 
been executed. Almost before he had uttered the question, he was 
thrown into the furnace. When the queen's page shortly made his 
appearance, he was told that the royal behest had been obeyed, and 
the workmen expected a reward. On his return to the palace, the 
king was astonished and horrified, and saw clearly that he had been 
foully deceived. " He hath opened a pit and dug it, and he is fallen 
into the hole he made" (Ps. vii. 16). 

4. He who indulges a habit of detraction is in danger of 
losing his soul. 

The pulse does not always correctly indicate the progress of a 
fatal disease, but if the tongue becomes black, it is a sure sign of 
approaching dissolution. So many people are assiduous in their 
prayers, are diligent churchgoers, and are considered to be pious, 
but their tongue, wherewith they blacken the character of others, 
infallibly indicates the mortal disease of their soul. To blast a 
man's reputation is a great sin, because his good name is better than 
great riches (Pro v. xxii. 1). It is a kind of murder, because it de- 
stroys a man's life as a citizen, i.e., his social standing, which de- 
pends on the repute in which he is held. It is also sinful because 
thereby one causes distress to one's neighbor. The man of honor 
values his good name above everything. He would rather part with 
his money, with all he possesses, with life itself, than lose his honor. 
Hence we may conclude how grievous a sin is detraction. " Pailers 
shall not possess the kingdom of God" (1 Cor. vi. 10). "Detractors 
. . . are worthy of death " (Rom. i. 32). " Whoscever shall say to his 
brother, thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire " (Matt. v. 22). The 
magnitude of sins against one's neighbor depends upon the harm that 
is done. On account of this, it matters greatly who the individual is 
who slanders his neighbor; if he be a man of position and respecta- 
bility, the sin he commits is liable to be grievous, for the esteem in 
which he is held gives weight to his words. In the case of one who is 
known to be a tattler, on the other hand, the sin is slight. Again it 
makes a difference who the individual is whose name is aspersed. 
The higher his position, and the greater the respect due to him, the 
worse is the sin. It is but a venial sin to speak against one who 
has already lost his character. But let the evil speaker beware, for 
if he has not already fallen into mortal sin, he is on the high road 
to it. 

2. TEE COMMAND AGAINST UNTRUTHFULNESS. 

God is truth itself; consequently He forbids every kind of 
falsehood, especially lying, hypocrisy, and flattery. 

God is true (John iii. 33). It is impossible for God to lie (Heb. 
vi. 18). Our Lord says: "T am the way and the truth and the life" 
C.Tohn xiv. 6). PTence God commands: "You shall not lie" (Lev. 
xix. 11). "Putting away lying, speak ye the truth every man to his 
neighbor" (Eph. iv. 25). Let your conversation be upright and 



408 The Commandments, 

truthful, if you would show yourselves to be the children of Him 
Who is the Father of truth and truth itself. 

1. He is guilty of lying who says what is not true with the 
intention of deceiving others. 

Lying is a misuse of speech. Speech was not given to man in 
order that he might deceive others, but as a means whereby he might 
communicate to them his thoughts. The conditions under which 
lies are commonly told are these: Under stress of circumstances, to 
avert some evil from one's self or from others, as when St. Peter in 
the outer court of the high priest's palace said : " I know not the 
man " (Matt. xxvi. 72) ; in jest, to amuse others ; or for the sake of 
injuring some one, as Jacob did when he deceived his father in order 
to obtain his paternal benediction (Gen. xxvii.). But to relate a fic- 
titious narrative, or make use of a fable for the instruction of others 
is no untruth, for it is done without an intention to deceive. Our 
Lord Himself employed parables in teaching. A liar is like counter- 
feit coin, which appears to be what it is not. 

2. Hypocrisy or dissimulation is acting a lie; we commit 
this sin when we speak or act differently to what we think and 
feel. 

Judas kissed Our Lord in the Garden of Olives, as if he were His 
greatest friend, but he only did so to betray Him (Matt. xxvi. 49). 
King Herod said to the three kings: "When you have found tho 
Child bring me word again, that I also may come and adore Him " 
(Matt. ii. 8). But he thought in his heart that when he knew where 
the Child was, he would have Him put to death. Those are hypo- 
crites who make an outward profession of piety while in reality their 
lives are far from irreproachable. They are like Satan, who can 
assume the form of an angel of light. To feign sanctity in this 
manner is worse than to sin openly. Some appear very devout in 
church, they cross themselves and smite their breasts, but all the 
while their thoughts are far away; they are dissemblers. The 
hypocrite is like a dunghill covered with snow, which hides what it 
really is. Our Lord compared such men to whited sepulchres, out- 
wardly beautiful, but within full of foulness and dead men's bones 
(Matt, xxiii. 27) ; also to wolves in sheep's clothing (Matt. vii. 15). 

3. Flattery consists in praising another immoderately to his 
face, against one's own conviction for the sake of advantage. 

King Herod Agrippa was highly gratified by the flattery of the 
Tyrians and Sidonians, when they exclaim.ed, on hearing his oration : 
" It is the voice of a god and not of a mnn." But the angel of the 
Lord forthwith struck him, and he was eaten by worms (Acts xii. 22, 
23). Flatterers speak contrary to their conviction; they deride a man 
behind his back while they praise him to his face. The flatterer only 
seeks his own advantage. He is like the cat which purrs, and the 
dog which fawns on his master to get a piece of meat. Crafty people 
cringe to others if they think anything can be gained. Flatterers 
frequent the presence of the rich, for from the poor they get 
nothing; they are like the locusts which do not come in the winter. 



The Ten Commandments cf God. 409 

or where the land is barren, but they alight in cultivated places, where 
there is plenty for them to devour. Flatterers praise immoderately, 
i.e., they ascribe excellences to a man which he does not possess, 
or they exaggerate his good qualities and palliate his misdeeds. They 
are dangerous acquaintances, because they hide a man's faults, in- 
stead of endeavoring, as a true friend would, to correct them. It is a 
matter of indifference to them whether they do harm or good, if they 
only get themselves into favor; they are like a cook who cares not 
whether the dishes he prepares are wholesome or the contrary, so 
long as they are tasty and please the palate. Flattery feeds sin as 
oil feeds a flame; it is a nursery of vice. Isaias exclaims, addressing 
flatterers : " Woe to you that call evil good and good evil " (Is. v. 20). 
Let us therefore be on our guard, if any one appears unusually com- 
plaisant and begins to praise us. Our Blessed Lady was troubled at 
the salutation of the angel. 

What art> the Reasons that should mahe us Refrain from Un- 
truthfulness ? 

1. The liar is like the devil and displeasing to God. 

He w^ho forfeits the confidence of his fellow-men causes a 
great deal of harm and is capable of committing all manner of 
evil deeds. 

The liar resembles the devil, for the devil is a liar and the father 
thereof (John viii. 44). Kemember how the serpent in paradise lied 
to Eve. Liars are children of the devil, not by nature, but by imita- 
tion. The liar is displeasing to God. God is truth itself, and there- 
fore He abhors the liar. Our Lord did not speak as sharply of any 
one as of the Pharisees. And why? Because they were hypocrites 
(Matt, xxiii. 27). From every class of sinners He gave an example 
of one who was saved; e.g., Zacheus among usurers, the good thief 
among highwaymen, Magdalen and the Samaritan at Jacob's well 
among profligate women, Saul among persecutors of the Church, 
but not one single individual among liars and hypocrites did He 
mention as having sought and found pardon. Many a time God 
punished liars severely; witness Ananias and his wife Saphira, who 
for their falsehood fell dead at St. Peter's feet (Acts v.) and Giezi, 
the servant of Eliseus, who was struck with leprosy for his lies and 
avarice (4 Kings v.). "Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord" 
(Prov. xii. 22). The liar forfeits the trust of his fellow-men. The 
shepherd who cried " Wolf " when no wolf was near, found he was 
not believed when his flock was really attacked; his comrades had 
been so often deceived that they did not heed his cries. A liar is not 
trusted when he speaks the truth ; he is hated by God and man. Liars 
often do a great deal of harm. The spies who went to view the 
Promised Land deceived the Israelites by their false report, and 
alarmed them so that they blasphemed God, wanted to stone the 
two spies who spoke the truth, and clamored to return to Egypt. See 
what mischief those men wrought: God declared His intention to 
destroy the people (ISTumb. xiii.). Jacob deceived his father and ob- 
tained his blessing fraudulently; his brother Esau threatened to kill 
him and Jacob was obliged to take to flight. " He that hath no guard 



410 The Commandments, 

on his speech shall meet with evils" (Prov. xiii. 3). The liar falls 
into many other sins. " Show me a liar and I will show yon a 
thief." Where you find hypocrisy, you find cheating and all manner 
of evil practices. A liar cannot possibly be God-fearing. The Holy 
Spirit will flee from the deceitful (Wisd. i. 5). All the piety and 
devotion of one whose words serve to conceal, not to express his 
thoughts, is a mere sham; do not associate with such a one, lest he 
corrupt you with his ungodly ways. " Lying men are without honor " 
(Ecclus. XX. 28). " The just shall hate a lying word" (Prov. xiii. 5). 

2. The pernicious habit of lying leads a man into mortal sin 
and to eternal perdition. 

Lying is in itself a venial sin; but it can easily become a mortal 
sin if it is the means of doing great harm, or causing great scandal. 
He who indulges the habit of lying runs no small risk of losing his 
soul, for God withdraws His grace from those who deceive their 
neighbor. "The mouth that belieth killeth the soul" (Wisd. i. 11). 
A thief is not so bad as a liar, for the thief can give back what he 
has stolen, whereas the liar cannot restore his neighbor's good name, 
of which he has robbed him. " A thief is better than a man that is 
always lying; but both of them shall inherit destruction" (Ecclus. 
XX. 27). A lie is a foul blot in a man (v. 26). The soul of the liar 
is like a counterfeit coin, stamped with the devil's effigy ; when at the 
Last Day, the Judge shall ask : " Whose image is this ? " the answer 
Y/ill be " the devil's ; " and He will then say : " Render unto the devil 
the things that are his" (St. Thomas Aquinas). The Lord will 
destroy all that speak a lie (Ps. v. 7). Liars shall have their portion 
in the lake burning with fire (Apoc. xxi. 8). Our Lord uttered a ter- 
rible denunciation of the Pharisees because of their hypocrisy (Matt, 
xxiii. 13). 

Lying is consequently forbidden, even if it may be the means 
of effecting much good. 

St. Augustine says it is just as wrong to tell a lie for your neigh- 
bor's advantage as to steal for the good of the poor. ISTot even to save 
one's own life or the life of another, is a falsehood justifiable. St. 
Anthimus, Bishop of ISTicomedia, would not allow the soldiers who 
were sent to arrest him, and who were enjoying his hospitality, to 
save him by a lie; he preferred to suffer martyrdom. We must not 
do evil that there may come good (Rom. iii. 8). The end does not 
justify the means. The enemies of the Jesuits allege that they teach 
and act upon the principle that the end justifies the means, but this 
has never been proved against them. It was the philosopher Voltaire 
who proclaimed that doctrine, for he said : " Lying is only reprehen- 
sible when it causes mischief; it is a virtue when it is a means of 
effecting good." 

A falsehood told in jest is not wrong if every one can see 
at once that it is- not meant in earnest. 

If any one says: "How delightfully mild it is to-day! " when the 
cold is exceptionally severe, no one will call this a sin. But if a 
foolish joke produces lamentable results, the case is different. A 



The Ten Commandments of God, 411 

gentleman once told a peasant who was at a distance from home, 
that he had heard his cottage and half the village where he lived 
was burned down ; he only meant to make an " April fool " of him, 
but the poor man took the news so much to heart that he fell 
down dead. As a rule it may be said that every lie, however trifling 
it may appear, injures either ourselves or our neighbor, for it is a 
departure from truth and uprightness; there is always a certain 
duplicity about it, even if it be only a joke. Let your speech be 
truthful and honest, as becomes children of Him Who is truth 
itself. 

It is, however, lawful to give an evasive answer to one who 
causes iis embarrassment by asking a question he has no right to 
ask. 

We are under no obligation to answer a question which another 
has no right to ask. We may return an evasive or an ambiguous reply, 
or refuse to give any at all. St. Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria, 
was concealed in a vessel on the Xile, when the soldiers of the 
Emperor Julian overtook and stopped it. On their inquiring where 
Athanasius was, his servant replied : " He is not gone far, if you 
make haste you will soon take him." The soldiers went onward on 
their quest, and the bishop escaped. The archangel Raphael himself 
told Tobias that he was Azarias, the son of a distinguished Jew, 
whose form he had assumed (Tob. v. IS), because, had he revealed his 
true nature, he could not have fulfilled the commission intrusted to 
him by God. If an impertinent person presumes to ask a professional 
secret of us, we make reply unceremoniously " I do not know," i.e., 
" it is not mine to tell." In this sense Our Lord stated that He did 
not know when the Day of Judgment would be (Mark xiii. 32). If 
any one whom we cannot trust wants to borrow money of us, we are 
justified in saying : " I have not any," that is, " to lend you." Again 
we may return an evasive answer if some one in authority, in the 
absence of proof, tries to force a confession of guilt from us, for no 
man is obliged to incriminate himself. In many cases we should 
refuse to give an answer. St. Firmus, Bishop of Tagasta, concealed 
in his house two young men, whom the emperor had unjustly con- 
demned to death. The ofiacers of justice came to the bishop, and 
demanded to be told where the young men were hidden. The prelate 
refused to answer; he was put to torture, but this availed nothing: 
" I can die," he said, " but I cannot make others miserable." The 
emperor hearing of his heroic conduct, pardoned the young men, 
Our Lord did not answer all the questions Pilate put to Him. It will 
be understood that ambiguous replies must only be given when con- 
siderations of the glory of God, the good of our neighbor, or the ex- 
igencies of our own position renders them necessary. When our 
neighbor has a right to the truth, we must answer simply and openly, 
in buying and selling, for instance, or drawing up an agreement. It 
would be grossly unjust if persons about to marry were to deceive one 
another by equivocating about money matters and other things. 

3. Whoso is really upright is like almighty God, is pleasing 
In His sight, and is esteemed by his fellow-men. 



412 The Commandments. 

Christ says : " I am the truth " (John xiv. 6). Therefore the lover 
of truth is like unto Him. The lover of truth is well pleasing to 
God. Our Lord said in praise of ISTathanael that he was: "An 
Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile" (John i. 47). The lover of 
truth is esteemed by his fellow-men. On one occasion when Csesar 
Augustus was making a triumphal entry into Rome, he happened to 
hear that among the captives there was a heathen priest, who had 
never been convicted of a lie. Immediately he ordered him to be 
liberated. St. John Cantius was once stopped by robbers who, after 
taking his purse, asked if he had any more money about him. The 
saint replied that he had not. After he had gone a few steps on his 
way, he remembered that he had some pieces of gold sewn up in his 
clothes ; he hastened after the robbers and gave them to them. • The 
thieves were so astonished that they restored all that they had taken 
from him. See how highly pagans and robbers esteem truthfulness ! 
Thus it is always best to acknowledge one's fault freely, for thereby 
one obtains forgiveness, or at least a mitigation of the punishment 
due to it. It is said that Washington, when a boy, hacked with a 
chopper a beautiful cherry-tree which his father greatly prized. His 
father was extremely angry when he saw what was done, and asked 
the boy if he was the culprit. He replied : " Yes, father. I will not tell 
a lie. I did it." This candor pleased his father so much that he did 
not punish the boy. We may, perhaps, sometimes have to suffer 
through speaking the truth, but the suffering is far outweighed by 
the approval of a good conscience. " He that walketh sincerely, 
walketh confidently" (Prov. x. 9). Our Lord exhorts us to be simple 
as doves (Matt. x. 16). Guile is not half so profitable as simplicity" 
It is therefore our wisest course to be candid and truthful. 



3. THE MEANS OF PREVENTING SINS OF THE 

TONGUE. 

It is the opinion of the Fathers of the Church that a third part 
of all the sins committed in the world are sins of the tongue. 

Sins of the tongue can be best avoided by checking talkative- 
ness, and being guarded in our speech; moreover by making 
excuses for those whom we hear spoken against, and not repeat- 
ing what is said of them. 

We must not indulge the love of talking too freely. St. Augus- 
tine says that silence is the best preventive of sins of the tongue. 
He who knows how to keep silence will speak wisely. " He that keep- 
eth his mouth, keepeth his soul; but he that hath no guard on his 
speech shall meet with evils" (Prov. xiii. 3). "In the multitude of 
words there shall not want sin" (Prov. x. 19). While all the organs 
of the senses are open to sight, God has enclosed the tongue behind a 
double wall, the lips and the teeth, to warn us to be circumspect in our 
speech. You should be as carefnl in choosing the words you speak, 
as in selecting the food you eat. Holy Scripture compares the tongue 
to a sharp knife, because we ought to be as cautious in our upe of it as 
the surgeon in the use of his knife, when he has to perform an oper- 



The Ten Commandments of God, 413 

ation on tlie human body. We should speak with all the more delibera- 
tion because what is once said cannot be as if it had not been said. 
We can no more recall the words we have spoken than we can the 
arrow we have let fly from the bow. Our Lord says : " Every idle word 
that men shall speak, they shall render an account for it in the 
Day of Judgment" (Matt. xii. 36). iSTay, He will even judge us by 
our words, for He adds : " By thy words thou shalt be justified, and 
by thy words thou shalt be condemned " (v. 37). " Death and life are 
in the power of the tongue" (Prov. xviii. 21). Furthermore, if any 
one is spoken evil of in our presence, we ought to life up our voice 
in his defence. Holy Scripture says : " Open thy mouth for the 
dumb" (Prov. xxxi. 8), that is, for him who, being absent, cannot 
defend himself. If therefore, you hear the misdeeds of another 
spoken of, endeavor to show that he did not act from a bad motive; 
if that is impossible, then make excuses for the act on the plea of 
\iolent temptation, ignorance, or human frailty, and thus, at any rate, 
liiitigate the harshness of the judgment passed on it. Or one may 
mention something to the credit of the person in question. This was 
St. Teresa's invariable practice, and no one dared in her presence to 
utter a word of detraction. One may also express one's disapproval 
by looking very grave, and thus putting the detractor to shame. It 
will have the effect of shooting arrows at a rock, the shaft will re- 
•^oniid upon the marksman. " The north wind driveth away rain, 
as doth a sad countenance a backbiting tongue" (Prov. xxv. 23). It 
is also advisable at once adroitly to change the conversation, and thus 
prevent the calumniator from pursuing the subject. By tolerating 
detraction one participates in the sin. We should never repeat any- 
thing depreciatory which we bear said of our neighbor. " Hast thou 
heard a word against thy neighbor ? Let it die within thee, trusting 
that it will not, burst thee. As an arrow that sticketh in a man's 
thigh, so is a word in the heart of a fool" (Ecclus. xix. 10, 12). Be 
very cautious in speaking of your neighbor, lest unawares you may 
blight his whole future. 



THE NINTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

See what is said concerning the Sixth Commandment; and re- 
specting the Sacrament of Matrimony ; also the words of Our Lord in 
Matt. V. 28, and of St. Paul, 1 Cor. x. 6. 



THE TENTH COMMANDMENT OF GOD. 

In the Tenth Commandment God forbids ns to endeavor to pos- 
sess ourselves of the property of another by unlawful means. 

In God's sight the will is equivalent to the deed. Evil desires are 
sinful as well as evil deeds, as the act is accomplished in will. There- 
fore transgressions of this commandment must not be omitted in 
confession (Council of Trent, 14, ch. 5). 



414 The Commandments. 



1, SOCIALISM. 

1. In our own day a large proportion of the so-called Socialists 
or social democrats aim at depriving their fellow-men of their 
private property by unjust means. 

Social democracy, or the rule of the people (Demos) proposes to re- 
construct human society. It is of recent origin, being first started in 
Germany in 1840, and propagated some ten years later by the notor- 
ious Jew, Marx. In 1862 another Jew named Lasalle was very suc- 
cessful in spreading socialistic doctrines, so much so that in 1878, 
a special law was passed for the suppression of Socialism. Associa- 
tions and meetings were prohibited, publications advocating its prin- 
ciples were seized, and the leading agitators were banished from sev- 
eral of the large towns. From that time forward the work of propa- 
gation was carried on covertly, in the workshop and clubroom, meet- 
ings being held in the woods, and pamphlets circulated privately. 
In 1880 a Socialistic Congress was held in Zurich, attended by 
members from all the countries of Europe to arrange a general 
programme for the universal upheaval of society and subversion of 
the existing order of things. Since then the system has made steady 
progress, and assumed a revolutionary character. Those who resort 
to open acts of violence in order to accelerate the disintegration of 
society are called anarchists. Switzerland is a hot-bed of Socialism, 
and there the principal organs of the society are printed. Socialism 
has gained ground chiefly on the continent of Europe. 

1. The object of Socialists is this: They want all private 
property to be confiscated by the State, and capital and labor 
equally distributed among the members of the State; moreover 
many of them would do away with religion, authority, social 
order, and family life. 

The fundamental principle of Socialism is: All property has 
been unjustly acquired. Consequently in the new republic no one is 
to possess personal property, but is to be provided for out of the public 
funds. Every one must work, and with the proceeds of his labor pur- 
chase what he needs. In the new republic of the extreme Socialists 
there is to be ni Dieu ni maitre, neither the ordinances of religion 
nor the institutions of law. These men openly declare themselves 
to be atheists and republicans; they say religion concerns the indi- 
vidual alone. The intercourse of man and woman is to take the 
place of wedlock; the children are to belong, not to their parents, 
but to tbe State, to be educated at the public expense ; a public kitchen 
is to supersede the domestic hearth. Prisons will not be needed, 
for there will be no criminals, since all crime comes from the posses- 
sion of private property. These principles have spread chiefly among 
the irreligious, who care only for the gratification of their appetites, 
and the lower orders, the proletariate, who, in the division of prop- 
erty, have nothing to lose and all to gain. They are mostly held by 
certain ones of the laboring class who have been thrown by peculiar 
circumstances into the arms of Socialism. 



TJie Ten Commandments of Ood. 415 

2. The origin and development of Socialism is chiefly to be 
ascribed to the increasing poverty of the working classes, the 
greed of gain and immoderate craving for enjoyment among the 
rich, and finally, the decrease of religious feeling in all classes 
of society. 

As in the human body disorders for the most part originate in the 
stomach, so discontent among the people generally arises from ma- 
terial want. The prevailing destitution among the lower orders is 
partly due to the employment of machinery. Machines can produce, 
in a few days, more than a hundred workmen can in a month, and 
goods can be manufactured at a far cheaper rate by machinery than 
when made by hand. Consequently hundreds are thrown out of 
employment. Through the introduction of machinery, wealth has 
accumulated in the hands of the manufacturers, and the number of 
the poor and discontented has increased, from day to day, swelling the 
ranks of Socialism. The employers, striving to make larger profits, 
in many cases do not treat their workpeople according to the maxims 
of the Gospel; they reduce their wages to a scanty pittance (the 
market value of labor being so low) ; they require them to work for a 
lengthened period; they heed not the bodily health of those they 
employ, and even destroy their sense of religion and morality. These 
and other evils naturally have the effect of rendering the workmen 
irreligious and discontented. Factory hands, employed constantly 
in working machinery, are apt to lose their mental vigor and indepen- 
dence, they perform their task mechanically, and are easily beguiled 
and misled. The exhaustion produced by long hours of labor disin- 
clines them to raise their hearts to God, thus they neglect their 
prayers. The wretched state of their homes, where several families 
live crowded together on account of poverty caused by the low rate of 
wages, adds to their moral degradation. Moreover, the sight of the 
rich man's greed of money on the one hand, and his extravagant 
expenditure and love of luxury on the other, excites the envy of the 
poor man, and arouses in him the desire to satisfy his idea of hap- 
piness at the cost of the capitalist. Thus God punishes the rich in 
the way that they have sinned ; the Socialist is the scourge wherewith 
He chastises them. In the present day the Christian faith is more 
and more undermined by an irreligious press, by godless associa- 
tions — notably the Freemasons — and in some lands by antichristian 
legislation; witness the exclusion of religious instruction from the 
schools. What wonder if the belief in God and a future life grows 
dim, the divine commandments are unheeded, arid the people, craving 
for happiness in this life, seek to wrest his wealth from their richer 
neighbor ! 

3. If the dangers wherewith Socialism threatens us are to be 
averted, the condition of the laboring classes must be ameli- 
orated; the rich must be liberal towards the poor, and religion 
must regain her place in the hearts of the people. 

Coercive measures will do no more good to the Socialist than 
random blows will correct a naughty child. If anything is to be 
done for him, it must be done through kindness. Above all, the em- 



*16 Tlie Commandments. 

ployer must deal with his workpeople according to the principles of 
Christianity and justice. Ketteler is right when he says : " If for one 
day we all acted in conformity with the teaching of the Gospel, all 
social evils would be at once swept away." The employer must pay 
his men properly, that is, their wages must be suiScient to support 
a Christian family suitably to their station, provided they are thrifty, 
industrious, and virtuous. The position of the workman must be 
secured; he must not be treated as a chattel, only to be employed as 
long as a good profit is to be got out of him. As the workman pays 
taxes, he is entitled to the privilege of the franchise. Opportunities 
of improving his mind should be afforded to him by the institution of 
libraries, evening classes, and the formation of workingmen's clubs, 
which the Holy Father strongly advocates. Legislation must also in- 
terfere to prevent the undue growth of the proletariate, through the 
absorption of lesser industries by the manufactories, and the accumu- 
lation of capital in the hands of a few plutocrats. The rich ought, as 
the Apostle says, " to give easily and communicate to others " (1 Tim. 
vi. 18). Now more than ever the rich are bound to give alms, other- 
wise they will be rigorously judged. But religion affords the most 
effectual means of combating Socialism. Socialdemocracyis too often 
nothing but tho absence of religious belief. Its chief dogma is the 
non-existence of God and of a future life, its chief commandment 
the gratification of the senses. Moreover, religion alone can give the 
poor the spirit of contentment, so essential to their happiness. 

4. Some of the socialistic theories could not possibly be 
realized; others might indeed be carried out, but they would 
be attended by fatal consequences. 

The universal equality which Socialists propose to bring about, 
is an utterly impracticable idea, especially in regard to property. 
For if the State apportioned to every one the exact amount required 
for his livelihood, what more probable than that one would spend it 
all, and another put a part by. Thus an inequality would immediately 
arise ; and to enforce the surrender of a man's savings would be sheer 
tyranny. The same endless variety which we see in nature, exists 
among mankind. Differences of age, of sex, of health, of physical 
power and mental endowments, above all of character' and of man> 
ners cannot be effaced, and from these, differences of position and of 
possessions are inseparable. Just as in an army all the soldiers 
cannot be officers nor all privates, so all members of society cannot 
stand on the same level. Some must manage the business of the 
State, or occupy themselves with military affairs, and they must 
naturally hold a higher rank than the other members of the State, 
because they work more exclusively for the common weal. The hap- 
piness the Socialist dreams of is not attainable upon earth. What- 
ever the exertions that may be made to ameliorate the lot of man 
here below, none can succeed in eliminating from it suffering, sick- 
ness, and death. Sorrow and suffering are the portions of mankind; 
a life of peace and enjoyment is not for this world. True happiness 
i^? not to be found in sensual pleasures, but in God. While the whole 
world lasts, crime, vice and poverty cannot be banished from it. Our 
Lord says: "The poor you have always with you" (John xii. 8). 



The Ten Commandments of God. 417 

And in regard to the proposed absorption of individual property by 
the State, this could not be accomplished without serious disturb- 
ances, for who would be willing to surrender his property without 
a struggle? And were community of goods once introduced, tran- 
quillity would not be attained; the oppressed minority would, out of 
revenge, commit fearful outrages. Besides, laborious and industrious 
individuals would not be content, as they would gain nothing by their 
industry; thus the working classes would lose instead of gaining. 
Socialistic theories could only be realized if men were like the lower 
animals, destitute of the love of liberty and the desire for improve- 
ment. Socialism would cast a blight upon culture and destroy all 
stimulus, all motive for the exercise of inventive genius. Few would 
exert themselves to make progress and aim at perfection if they knew 
their achievements would bring them no reward. In the socialistic 
republic all would be slaves. ~Ro man would exert himself to do better 
than another, if he knew all was provided for him ; there would be a 
premium upon slothfulness and negligence. Experience has shown 
the evils brought upon mankind by the example of communities 
which have had their goods in common, and which have been noted 
for their crimes and have come to an ignominious end. But although 
the dreams of the Socialist are mere fantasies of the brain, yet, like 
much else that is undesirable, they are not without a certain use. 
As a hurricane tears down what is rotten and crazy, so Socialism 
points out the weak points in the social structure, and compels our 
rulers to institute the needful reforms. Attention has been drawn 
pre-eminently to the exploitation of the laborer by the capitalist, and 
the claims of the poor have been brought into notice. Yet the harm 
done by Socialism is far greater than any possible good it may in- 
directly produce. 

2. All who endeavor by unlawful means to deprive their neigh- 
bor of his personal property, live in a state of mortal sin. 

The mere fact of coveting what belongs to another is a sin. We 
know that all sins bring others in their train, and this is no excep- 
tion to the rule. St. Paul says that the inordinate desire of money 
is the root of all evils (1 Tim. vi. 10), and the utterances of Socialists 
at their gatherings prove the truth of these words. Their speeches 
often abound with virulent attacks upon all in authority, on the Pope, 
on priests, and civil magistrates. Some go so far as to assert that 
perjury in a court of law is permissible, if it furthers their own 
interests. We know the crimes of which anarchists have been 
guilty, dynamite outrages and assassinations. Let it not be said in 
behalf of their principles that the early Christians had all things in 
common, for the voluntary sharing of goods is quite different to what 
the Socialists propose to enforce. The fundamental principle of 
Christian charity, which urges to almsgiving is this : " Brother, what 
is mine is thine ;" whereaf? the Socialist says : " Brother, what is thine 
is mine." Again, the Socialists point to the religious Orders, where 
all is the property of the community; they say what is possible for 
them is possible in the State of the future. There is, however, no an- 
alogy between the two; for voluntary poverty and obedience f-orm 
the basis of the religious life, while in the State of the future sensua] 
•ratifications are to be encouraged and enjoyed. 



418 TJie Commandments, 



XL THE WORKS OF MERCY. 

1. TEE VALUE OF EARTHLY GOODS AND THE USE 
TO BE MADE OF THEM. 

1. Earthly riches do not of themselves make us better in God's 
sight. 

It is not the possession, but the good use of earthly goods which 
makes us truly rich. It is in his moral qualities, in virtue and not 
in his wealth, that man's real dignity and greatness consist. Let not 
the rich man arrogate anything to himself because of the abundance 
of the goods he possesses. The grave teaches us the worthlessness 
of earth's treasures, for we can carry nothing with us out of the 
world (1 Tim. vi. 7). When Croesus, the rich king, showed all his 
treasures to the sage Solon and asked if he did not consider him a 
happy man, the sage replied : " No man is to be pronounced happy 
before his death." Croesus was displeased by this answer, but when, 
defeated and a prisoner, he stood beside the funeral pyre, he acknowl- 
edged the truth of the words. Let us not therefore strive eagerly 
to acquire riches on earth, but obey the injunction of Our Lord : " Lay 
not up to yourselves treasures on earth, where the rust and moth 
consume and where thieves break through and steal" (Matt. vi. 19). 
How admirable is Solomon's prayer : " Give me neither beggary nor 
riches; give me only the necessaries of life" (Prov. xxx. 8). St. 
Paul says : " Having food and wherewith to be covered, with these 
we are content" (1 Tim. vi. 8). Remember Christ teaches us to ask 
day by day our daily bread. 

2. Earthly goods have their value, however, because with 
them we can earn eternal felicity. 

On the one hand earthly riches contribute to our temporal wel- 
fare; they relieve us of many cares and anxieties, may render our 
life pleasant, and give us a certain ascendancy over our fellow-men. 
The man of wealth is a small potentate. They are also a means of 
salvation. This may be inferred from the words Our Lord will ad- 
dress to those on His right hand at the Day of Judgment (Matt. xxv. 
34). " Your property was not given you," says St. John Chrysostom, 
"that you might live in luxury and revelry, but that you may help 
the poor." Money should therefore be regarded as a means of doing 
good, for it is only good when turned to good account. 

3. God is the Lord of all earthly riches; we are only His 
stewards. 

" The earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof" (Ps. xxiii. 1). 

" The silver is Mine and the gold is Mine, saith the Lord of hosts " 
(Agg. ii. 9). Thus when we give alms, we distribute what belongs to 
8nother, not to ourselves. 

4. Earthly riches should consequently only be employed in 
accordance with the commands of God. 



The Works of Mercy. 419 

We are not even at liberty to make what use we choose of the 
senses and members of our body; we must employ them as God or- 
dains. It is exactly the same with our property. And how are we 
to employ our property according to the will of God ? We must em- 
ploy it to His glory and for the welfare of our fellow-men. As the 
steward has to give an account to his master, so we shall have to 
give an account to God; He will reckon with us concerning the use 
of the talents entrusted to us (Matt. xxv. 14). At our death He will 
say to us : " Give an account of thy stewardship " (Luke xvi. 2). 



2. TEE PRECEPT TO PERFORM WORKS OF MERCY. 

1. Christ has strictly enjoined upon us to assist our neighbor 
who is in need with our earthly goods; for He will only grant 
everlasting happiness to those who have helped their fellow-men 
who were in need. 

At the Last Judgment Our Lord will, as He tells us, set some men 
on His right hand and others on His left. To those on His right He 
will say : " Come, ye blessed of My Father, possess you the kingdom 
prepared for you from the foundation of the world. For I was 
hungry and you gave Me to eat; I was thirsty and you gave Me to 
drink; I was a stranger and you took Me in, naked and you covered 
Me ; sick and you visited Me ; I was in prison and you came to Me." 
Then shall the just answer Him, saying : " Lord, when did we see Thee 
hungry or thirsty or a stranger, and ministered to Thee ? " And Our 
Lord shall answer them : " Amen I say to you, as long as you did to 
one of these. My least brethren, you did it to Me." And to those on 
His left hand He shall say : " Depart from Me, you cursed, into ever- 
lasting fire ! For I was hungry and you gave Me not to eat; I was 
thirsty, and you gave Me not to drink." Then they also shall answer 
Him in like manner as the just. And He shall answer them : " As long 
as you did it not to one of these least, neither did you do it to Me " 
(Matt. xxv. 31-46). The poor must win heaven by patience, the rich 
by works of mercy. One gladly parts with the lesser for the sake of 
keeping the greater; one submits to have a foot or an arm ampu- 
tated in order to save one's life. So must you give up the lesser, in 
order not to lose the greater, which is eternal felicity. 

1. The rich are chiefly bound to assist the needy. 

To whom much is given, of him much shall be required (Luke xii. 
48). The rich ought of their abundance to supply the wants of the 
poor (2 Cor. viii. 14). They ought to sustain the poor, as the elm 
supports the vine. The elm is a stately tree, but it produces no fruit ; 
the vine is a creeping plant, and unless it clings to something, its 
branches trail on the ground and its fruit is apt to be spoiled. But 
if it casts its tendrils round the elm, and clings to its trunk, it will 
grow up and flourish. The rich man is like the elm; his wealth 
alone gives him no claim to an eternal reward, but by the help he ren- 
ders to the poor he will purchase for himself everlasting treasures. 
But if the rich do not give willingly, they imperil their eternal sal- 



420 The Commandments. 

vation. Our Lord says: "It is easier for a camel to pass through 
the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of 
heaven" (Matt. xix. 24). The rich run risk of shipwreck, like a 
vessel that is too heavily freighted. They are reluctant to part with 
iheir money because they think the enjoyment of the present is real 
happiness; they mistake the shadow for the reality, and value the 
false more than the true. In the hour of death they will discover 
their sad mistake, as a bird resting upon a limed bough only finds 
that he is a captive when he attempts to fly away. The rich man, 
when the moment comes for him to pass from time into eternity, 
will feel how bitter has been his deception, like one who awakens 
from a delightful dream to find his happiness a delusion (Ps. Ixxv. 
6). Therefore God has made the way to the attainment of riches 
a difficult and thorny path, as a farmer plants a quickset hedge 
round the field that he does not want trodden down. 

2. Even the poor man can help his neighbor who is in need. 

Tobias says : " If thou hast much, give abundantly ; if thou hast 
little, take care to bestow willingly a little" (Tob. iv. 9). If any 
one gives a cup of cold water out of charity to his neighbor, provided 
that is all he can give, it will count for as much as when Zacheus the 
publican gave the half of his goods to the poor. The poor widow in 
the Temple gave more with her two mites, than all the rich who cast 
their gifts into the treasury (Luke xxi.). The widow of Sarephta 
gave Elias the last remainder of her oil (3 Kings xvii. 12). 

3. He who has not helped his neighbor who is in need, will 
find no mercy with God. 

St. James says : " Judgment without mercy to him that hath not 
done mercy" (Jas. ii. 13). The rich man was buried in hell, because 
he gave no alms. "He that stoppeth his ear against the cry of 
the poor shall also cry and not be heard" (Prov. xxi. 13). He who 
refuses to relieve the necessitous defrauds them of their own. St. 
John Chrysostom says the rich man who is hard-hearted is no better 
than a thief, for he stores in his chests treasures that belong to 
others. He who keeps exclusively to himself the gifts Providence 
has bestowed on him, creates himself the murderer of those who 
perish from want. It is not enough to say we have never wronged 
the poor. By not giving alms we incur the penalty due to those who 
take from their neighbor that which is his. 

2. The assistance we give to the needy, of whatever nature 
it may be, is an alms, or work of mercy. 

These works are called works of mercy, because in performing 
them we are actuated by feelings of compassion or mercy. 

3. The works of mercy are either spiritual or corporal, accord- 
ing as the necessities we relieve are spiritual or corporal. 

The corporal wants of our neighbor are: Food, drink, clothing, 
shelter, liberty, health, or life. What can we do to supply him with 
these? His spiritual wants, the needs of the soul, are: The knowl- 
edge of the truth (for which instruction or counsel is required) ; 
a good will, through lack of which he offends God or his fellow-man 



The Works of Mercy. 421 

(which calls for correction, patient endurance or forgiveness) ; a 
joyful spirit (in lack of which he needs consolation). If we can 
do little or nothing to succor and solace our neighbor, we must pray 
for him, that God may come to his aid. 



3. THE SEVERAL WORKS OF MERCY. 

1. The corporal works of mercy are: (1), To feed the hungry; 
(2), To give drink to the thirsty; (3), To clothe the naked; (4), 
To harbor the stranger; (5), To visit the sick; (6), To ransom 
the captive; (7), To bury the dead. 

(1), To feed the hungry. Abraham entertained the three men; 
Christ fed five thousand people; St. Elizabeth of Hungary gave all 
the contents of her granaries to the poor in a time of famine; St. 
Louis of France provided a dinner daily for a hundred and twenty 
poor men, and sometimes waited on them himself. (2), To give drink 
to the thirsty. The Samaritan woman gave Our Lord water to drink 
at Jacob's well ; Rebecca drew water for Eleazar. Wine and medicine 
come under this category. (3), To clothe the naked. Tabitha at 
Joppe made garments for destitute widows; St. Martin gave half his 
cloak to a beggar; Christmas gifts to poor schools are works of 
mercy. (4), To harbor the stranger. Hospitality is a duty enjoined 
upon us by St. Paul when he says : " Hospitality do not forget; for by 
this some, not being aware of it, have entertained angels " (Heb. xiii. 
2). Both Abraham and Lot were privileged to receive angels in 
human form beneath their roof. The Good Samaritan took the man 
who had been wounded by robbers to an inn. Martha and Mary 
received Our Lord into their house as their guest. The monks of St. 
Bernard perform a work of mercy when they rescue travellers who 
have met with accidents, and carry them to their hospice, where 
they nurse them until they recover. When travelling was more dan- 
gerous than at present, they were the means of saving many lives. 
(5), To ransom innocent captives. Abraham delivered Lot out of the 
hands of the robbers; the Christians in Damascus rescued St. Paul 
out of prison ; in the Middle Ages the Order of Ransom was founded 
for the release of Christians taken prisoner and held in slavery by 
the Turks. More than a million Christian slaves regained their lib- 
erty on the payment of a sum of money, or by others taking their 
place. Cardinal Lavigerie also established a guild for the liberation 
of slaves in Africa. 

(6), To visit the sick is only to be reckoned as a work of 
mercy, when the object of the visit is to afford spiritual or tem- 
poral relief to the sufferer. 

The visit Job's friends paid him was no work of mercy. That of 
the Samaritan to the wounded Jew was on the other hand, most 
meritorious. Several religious Orders have been founded for the ex- 
press object of nursing the sick in hospitals or elsewhere ; witness that 
of the Christian Brothers, founded by St. John of God (1617), and 
that of the Sisters of Charity, founded about the same time by St. 
Vincent of Paul. The self-sacrifice of Catholic priests in taking the 



422 The Commandments, 

last sacraments to the dying, especially at the time of an epidemic, is 
most emphatically a work of mercy. We read of the Emperor Joseph 
II. that he was asked one day by a poor boy in the street for a florin, 
that he might get a doctor for his mother. The emperor gave him the 
money, and asked where he lived. He then went to see the sick woman, 
who took him for a doctor, and he wrote a prescription for her. Shortly 
after his departure the doctor whom the boy had called in made his 
appearance. On opening the paper to look at the supposed prescrip- 
tion, he read these words : " Woman, your visitor was the emperor. 
Take this paper to the palace, and fifty ducats will be paid you." 

(7), To bury the dead. It is a particuarlj meritorious work 
of mercy to provide the dead with decent burial, to follow the 
body to the grave, or to erect a stone to his memory. 

Tobias used to bury the dead at the time of the persecution of 
the Jews under Sennacherib. The inhabitants of the city of Nairn 
accompanied the bier on which the young man was carried to the 
grave. Joseph of Arimathea and Nicodemus laid the body of Our 
Lord in the sepulchre. In burying the dead we do him a service 
which he can never requite. "We ought," says St. Augustine, "to 
show respect to the bodies of Christian people, because they have 
been the instrument employed by the soul." In some localities the 
pernicious custom prevails of making funerals an occasion for feast- 
ing and revelry. This is most unseemly, and a waste of money which 
might be spent for the benefit of the soul of the deceased. Besides 
it is the means of stifling the grace of God, which exercises a salu- 
tary influence on the soul through the solemn ceremonies of an inter- 
ment. 

In addition to the seven corporal works of mercy abeady 
enumerated, there are others, e.g., the distribution of money, 
the rescue of one in danger of death, giving assistance in case 
of accidents, etc. 

King Pharao's daughter performed a work of mercy when she 
saved the life of the infant Moses ; so did Veronica when she gave her 
veil to wipe Our Lord's countenance. In fact every kind word or 
act, if spoken or done to our neighbor because we see Our Lord in 
him, is a meritorious work. Our Lord Himself says that a cup of 
cold water given in His name shall not go unrewarded (Mark ix. 40). 

2. The spiritual works of mercy are: (1), To instruct the 
ignorant; (2), To counsel the doubtful; (3), To admonish sin- 
ners; (4), To bear wrongs patiently; (5), To forgive offences 
willingly; (6), To comfort the afflicted; (7), To pray for the 
living and the dead. 

One may instruct the ignorant either in religion or other useful 
knowledge either by word of mouth or by writing good books. The 
holy apostles, and the evangelizers of the different nations, performed 
a work of mercy, as in the present day do all the missionaries to 
heathen lands, besides all preachers, catechists, confessors, Christian 
writers and teachers. To co-operate with God for the salvation of 



The Works of Mercy. 

souls is the highest of all works. Those who impart religious in- 
struction to others will have a more exalted place, and enjoy a 
greater degree of glory in heaven. Daniel says : " They that instruct 
many to justice shall shine as stars for all eternity" (Dan. xii. 3). 
Those who collect money for foreign missions also perform a work of 
mercy. To counsel the doubtful is another of the spiritual works of 
mercy; but the counsel given must previously be maturely consid- 
ered, and not forced upon one's neighbor. Joseph gave good advice 
to Pharao; Christ to the rich youth; Gamaliel to the council. 

We ought to admonish the sinner, provided we can do so 
without prejudice to ourselves, and provided a good result may 
be anticipated. 

He would indeed be cruel, who seeing a blind man on the brink 
of a precipice, did not warn him of his danger; and yet more blame- 
worthy would be he who, having it in his power to save his brother 
from everlasting death, will not take the trouble to rescue him. 
God will require us to give an account for the soul of our neighbor, 
if we omit anything we might have done to further the work of his 
salvation. "We call a man's attention," says St. John Chrysostom, 
" to a stain upon his clothes, but we do not tell him of stains upon 
his soul; which, if not washed away, will be his eternal ruin." ISToe 
preached penance to the ISTinivites. The good thief admonished his 
fellow culprit. Admonition is like salt; it makes the wound smart 
more, but it heals it. Thus reproof is not agreeable but useful. 
If by administering a rebuke we shall bring trouble on ourselves, 
we are not obliged to give it; no one is required to love his neighbor 
more than himself. (It is however the bounden duty of those who 
are in authority to admonish those under them of their faults; 
justice, not charity, requires it.) ISTor are we called upon to correct 
others if no good will come of it. Who would be so unwise as to 
rebuke a man who was intoxicated? Rebuke him by all means, but 
wait until he is sober. 

In admonishing sinners we should observe the rule Christ 
gave us. 

First we are told to rebuke our brother when we are alone with 
him. If he will not hear us, we must rebuke him in the presence of 
two or three witnesses. If that is useless, we are to tell his superiors 
(Matt, xviii. 15-17). 

We must admonish our neighbor with gentleness and 
charity. 

The greater the gentleness and tact wherewith a reprimand is 
administered, the more effect it produces. If our admonition is to be 
of use, it must fall on the heart like a gentle rain upon the earth; 
for it is the still, quiet rain that sinks into and fertilizes the soil, 
whereas a violent, sudden downpour only breaks up the surface of the 
ground and rushes away. The bitterness of the reproof should be 
tempered with kindness and charity, as sour fruit is sweetened with 
sugar and cooked to render it digestible. Before rebuking any one, 
it is well to mention something praiseworthy in his conduct, and 
afterwards to speak a word of encouragement. If the rebuke is harsh 



424 The Commandments, 

and severe, it will do no good, only harm. Kough reproaches will 
not bring a man to a better mind, any more than kicks will put a 
wanderer in the right road. They will only drive him in the opposite 
direction. The sinner will not resolve to amend his ways unless he 
feels that the admonisher has his welfare sincerely at heart. The 
Christian must treat his erring brother as the coachman treats a 
timid horse, which is not to be managed by the violent use of the whip, 
but by a gentle hand on the rein. 

" He who causeth a sinner to be converted from the error of 
his ways shall save his soul from death, and cover a multitude 
of sins " (Jas. v. 20). 

We are told that the Evangelist St. John took the greatest 
trouble to save an unhappy youth whom he had converted, and who 
afterwards became a highwayman. He went after him to the moun- 
tain fastnesses, and called to him : " Why, my son, do you fly from 
your father, from a defenceless old man? Fear not; I will myself 
implore pardon for you of God, and make satisfaction for you." 
These kind words touched the heart of the prodigal. We cannot 
offend Christ more deeply than by robbing Him of the souls He has 
redeemed; nor can we honor Him more than by bringing back to 
Him those which have gone astray. There is nothing upon earth 
to compare with the value of a soul. " If thou wert to give vast sums 
to the poor," says St. John Chrysostom, " the merit would be nothing 
in comparison with that of having converted one sinner." He who 
converts a sinner deserves an infinitely greater reward than he who 
rescues a king's son from death; for he saves a son of the King of 
heaven, and saves him not from temporal, but from eternal death. 

When we bear wrongs patiently, we benefit not ourselves 
only, but also our fellow-man; we prevent him from going to 
greater lengths, and make it easier to bring him to a sense of his 
wrongdoing. 

David bore Semei's abuse patiently, and after a time he acknowl- 
edged his sin and implored the king to pardon him. We lose nothing 
if we suffer wrong patiently, for when our innocence is proved, our 
forbearance will be richly rewarded. It is also most meritorious, as 
St. Teresa says, not to justify one's self when one is blamed. Unhap- 
pily too many people are like the hedgehog, which rolls itself into a 
prickly ball the moment it is touched, for at the first fault-finding 
word they break out into excuses and exculpations. However it is in- 
cumbent upon us to protect ourselves from false accusations, when to 
bear the injustice in silence would be productive rather of evil than of 
good. Slight affronts should not be heeded, but one ought not to 
allow a heinous crime to be falsely laid to one's charge. 

By forgiving offences willingly is meant that we do not seek 
to avenge ourselves on those who offend against us, but treat 
them kindly, and are ready to confer upon them any benefit 
within our power. 

Joseph's conduct towards his brethren affords a beautiful example 
of this virtue; instead of revenging himself on them, he embraced 



The Works of Mtrcy, ^25 

them and kissed them and loaded them with gifts. If we willingly 
forgive those who trespass against us, God will forgive our trans- 
gressions, as we are told in the fifth clause of the Our Father. 

We can comfort the afflicted by showing them heartfelt sym- 
pathy, by suggesting grounds of consolation, or by succoring 
them in need. 

Evincing sympathy towards those in trouble is called condoling 
with them. We may suggest comfort to the poor and afilicted by 
reminding them of the watchful care of God's providence, of the hap- 
piness that awaits them in heaven ; to the sinner we may speak of the 
divine mercy and compassion. We shall do still better, if we relieve 
them in their distress. Thus Our Lord comforted the widow of Naim, 
and the sisters of Lazarus. Grief is a mental malady : " The sadness 
of a man consumeth the heart " (Prov. xxv. 20). To console the sor- 
rowing is as much a good work as to nurse the sick. Words of com- 
fort in a time of affliction are as welcome as rain in the time of 
drought. 

To pray for the living and the dead is a work well pleasing 
in God's sight. It benefits at the same time both them and us. 
God enjoins upon us especially to pray for our parents and bene- 
factors, for the Pope, and the ruler of our country, for the 
bishops and clergy, and also finally for our enemies. 

St. Paul declares that it is good and acceptable in the sight of 
God, that prayers be made for all men, for kings particularly, and 
those that are in high stations (1 Tim. ii. 2, 3). Furthermore we read 
in Holy Scripture : " It is a holy and a wholesome thought to pray 
for the dead, that they may be loosed from their sins " (2 Mach. xii. 
46). Far from being losers, we are greatly the gainers if we oifer 
prayer to God for others, for we thereby increase our merit, and 
draw down upon ourselves the blessing of God. Before Judas Macha- 
beus gained the decisive victory over Meaner, he caused sacrifices to 
be offered for the warriors who should fall in battle. Prayers offered 
for others sometimes seem to be fruitless. On one occasion when 
St. Gertrude complained that no improvement was discernible in 
the persons for whom she prayed. Our Lord said to her : " No sincere 
prayers are in vain, although the effect they produce may be imper- 
ceptible to the eye of man." Abraham interceded for Sodom, Moses 
for the people, the Christians for St. Peter when he was in prison. 
At the Last Supper Our Lord prayed for His disciples and for the 
whole Church, and on the cross He prayed for His enemies. Let us 
follow the example He gave us. When we recite the Our Father we 
pray for all men ; we say, " Give us our daily bread, etc." 

h. IN WHAT SPIRIT SHOULD THE WORKS OF MERCY 
BE PERFORMED 9 

1. "We ought not to do good to our neighbor in order to be 
seen and praised by men, for in that case we have our reward 
on earth (Matt. vi. 1). 



426 The Commandments, 

'Eov should we do good to our neighbor in the hope that he 
will requite our kindness (Luke xiv. 12). 

Our Lord says : " When thou dost give alms, let not thy left 
hand know what thy right doth" (Matt. vi. 3). The saints, as a rule, 
gave alms secretly. St. Nicholas threw money to the poor out of his 
window at night ; others performed works of mercy under cover of the 
darkness. The less reward we get on earth for our good works, the 
greater will be our recompense after death. Hence, as Christ ex- 
horts us, we should do good by preference to those who cannot repay 
us: the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind (Luke xiv. 13). Nor 
must we expect to be thanked. God is repaid with ingratitude and so 
are the charitable among men. Yet we ought not on this account to 
desist from doing good, for it is in showing kindness to the unthank- 
ful that true charity consists. 

2. We must do good to our neighbor for Christ's sake. 

Christ lives in His people. This we learn from His own words 
at the Day of Judgment. Thus we must see God in our neighbor. 
St. Magdalene of Pazzi placed works of mercy before prayer : " "When 
I engage in mental prayer," she said, " God assists me ; but when I 
do good to my neighbor, I assist God, for He regards what I do to 
my neighbor as done to Him." 

3. We should do good to our neighbor promptly and pleas- 
antly. 

We ought not to postpone giving alms until the morrow, if we 
can do it at once (Prov. iii. 28). What is given promptly has a double 
value. He that showeth mercy, let him do it with cheerfulness (Rom. 
xii. 8). God loveth a cheerful giver (2 Cor. ix. 7). We ought not 
to upbraid the poor (Ecclus. xviii. 18). Those who are harsh 
to the poor are like a surgeon who in healing one wound makes 
another. We ought not to question the poor at too great length; 
we should rather give of our own accord, without waiting to be 
asked. Nor ought we to hold ourselves aloof from the poor. If 
almighty God permits us to proffer our petitions to Him at all times, 
and is always ready to grant them, surely we who are but dust and 
ashes, ought not to do less for our brethren. The Emperor Rudolph 
of Hapsburg used to say : " Every one can have access to my presence. 
I was not chosen emperor that I might live in seclusion." 

4. We are only required to give alms of our superfluity. 

In no wise are we bound to deprive ourselves of what is necessary 
for our subsistence or to keep up our position. Our Lord says: 
"Yet of that which remaineth give alms" (Luke xi. 41). Theo- 
logians are of opinion that it is sufficient to give a small percentage 
of one's yearly savings. 

5. We must only give alms out of what is our own, and only 
give to those who are really poor or who are unable to work. 

Some people think they will give alms at another's expense; they 
take from one what they give to another. Such almsgiving, which 
is an act of injustice, is abhorrent to God. Therefore let a 



The Works of Mercy, 427 

man who is in debt pay his creditors, instead of giving alms to the 
poor. Justice comes before generosity. "How manifestly unjust it 
would be to take the coat off one man's back to give it to another; 
it is no less unjust to give in alms money which thou owest to another " 
(St. John Chrysostom). As well might a thief, when brought to 
trial, offer the judge a part of the stolen property; he would only 
insure his conviction. " And canst thou hope to gain the favor of 
God by giving alms of what is not thy own?" (St. Augustine.) 
To give to those who are known to be idle and addicted to drink, is 
to encourage them in sin ; but it is better to err on the side of charity 
than of severity. When the Master of the house is so liberal, it ill 
becomes His steward to be niggardly. As all shipwrecked sailors 
without distinction are received in a port, so we should not sit in 
judgment upon those who have fallen into poverty, but hasten to 
help them in their misfortune. 

6. In giving alms, preference should be shown to our rela- 
tives, our fellow Catholics, and those who are in the greatest 
need. 

St. Paul exhorts us : " Let us do good to all men, but especially 
to those who are of the household of the faith" (Gal. vi. 10). For 
what we give to the poor we give to God, as we know from Christ's 
own words. The money bestowed in alms is lent to the Lord and He 
will repay it with high interest. 

5. OF WHAT BENEFIT ABE THE WORKS OF MERCY 

TO U8? 

1. Almsgiving obtains for us the remission of our sins; that 
is to say the sinner obtains the grace of repentance, while the 
just man receives the pardon of venial sin, and the remission of 
the temporal penalty. 

Our Lord therefore says : " Blessed are the merciful, for they shall 
obtain mercy" (Matt. v. 7). "Water quencheth a flaming fire and 
alms resisteth sins" (Ecclus. iii. 33). St. Ambrose exhorts the sin- 
ner to employ his money to ransom his soul. Daniel gives similar 
counsel to King Nabuchodonosor (Dan. iv. 24). By almsgiving the 
sinner obtains actual graces, which gradually bring about his conver- 
sion, or sometimes he obtains extraordinary graces. Cornelius, a 
heathen* centurion at Csesarea, was the recipient of great graces as the 
reward of his prayers and alms; an angel was sent to him, and he was 
converted by the preaching of St. Peter. " A merciful man doeth 
good to his own soul " (Prov. xi. 17) ; almsgiving is a means whereby 
we may escape eternal perdition. The archangel Raphael expressly 
told Tobias : " Alms deliver from all sin, and from death, and will not 
suffer the soul to go into darkness " (Tob. iv. 11). " He who has made 
the poor man happy," says St. John Chrysostoii, "will not himself 
suffer misery." God will not allow a man who has shown mercy 
to be lost; He will grant him the graces necessary for his conversion. 
St. Jerome declares that he has never known one who in his lifetime 
was liberal to the poor, to make a bad end; for the charitable have 
many to intercede for them. The just man obtains the remission 



428 The Commandments, 

of what is due to his sins by almsgiving; for St. Thomas Aquinas 
says the satisfaction made by alms is greater than that which is 
effected by prayer and fasting. 

2. By almsgiving we obtain an eternal recompense, provided 
that at the time we are in a state of grace. 

It is related of the German Emperor Louis II. that he lost his way 
in a forest when hunting one day. Late at night he reached a vil- 
lage presbytery, and begged the priest to give him a night's lodging. 
The priest entertained the stranger most hospitably; the next day 
the latter took leave, after thanking his host. Some weeks later a 
messenger presented himself at the priest's humble dwelling, and 
handed him a letter stamped with the imperial seal; it announced 
his nomination to the see of Miinster. In like manner your heavenly 
King will reward your alms hereafter in a manner which you little 
anticipate. Alms are like seed cast into the ground; they are not 
lost, but yield an abimdant harvest. The ant lays up a store for the 
winter ; by giving alms we lay up treasures for the life to come. Thus 
we exchange what is temporal for what is eternal; we purchase ever- 
lasting possessions with our earthly pelf. Success in trade consists in 
buying cheap and selling dear; we too are engaged in commerce, and 
for a mere trifle, a piece of bread, even a cup of cold water, we pur- 
chase for ourselves heaven. When the new continent was discovered, 
the aborigines exchanged silver and gold for things of no value to the 
Europeans who landed on their shores. So we obtain the good 
things of God in return for the worthless goods of earth. " Give, 
then, to the poor that which thou canst not keep, in order to obtain 
that which thou canst not lose" (St. Augustine). Even in this life 
almsgiving produces a feeling of happiness. A youth was one day 
walking through a wood with his tutor, when he saw a pair of boots 
which a woodcutter at work at a little distance had taken off. The 
boy wanted to hide them, but his tutor suggested that rather than 
do that, he should put a piece of money in each. When the poor man 
went back to get his boots, he found the coins, and falling on his 
knees, thanked God and invoked blessings on the unknown benefactor 
who had helped him in dire distress. The money was the exact 
sum he needed to pay his rent. The boy, who had watched what 
occurred, turned to his tutor and exclaimed : " I never felt so happy 
in all my life." Truly a blessing attends works of mercy. 

3. Almsgiving brings down upon ns temporal blessings: God 
increases onr means and gives us bodily health. 

"He that is inclined to mercy, shall be blessed" (Prov. xxii. 9). 
"The blessing of the Lord maketh men rich" (Prov. x. 22). God 
declares that he that giveth to the poor shall not want (Prov. xxviii. 
27) . Our Lord says : " Give, and it shall be given to you " (Luke vi. 
38). The widow of Sarephta gave generously to Elias. For this she 
got back far more than she gave to the prophet, for her little store 
of meal and of oil was not diminished until the time of scarcity was 
over (3 Kings xvii. 14). A nobleman of Granada, who had bestowed 
a large alms on St. John of God, went to him the same day disguised 
as a mendicant, and asked for money. The saint gave him all that he 
had received from him a few hours before. Thereupon the noble- 



The Duty of Gratitude. 429 

man restored ten times the amount, and was his greatest benefactor 
during the rest of his life. God acts in a similar way; if we give to 
the poor even a portion of what He has bestowed on us, we shall 
receive it again with interest. A tree grows all the better for being 
pruned; so the rich will increase in goods if they part with some of 
their wealth, in acts of charity. St. Paula gave a great deal to the 
poor, though she was the mother of five children; when her relatives 
remonstrated with her, she said : " The best inheritance I can be- 
queath to my children is the blessing of heaven, which almsgiving 
draws down on us." God gives bodily health to those who are boun- 
tiful to the poor. The archangel Raphael was sent to heal Tobias 
because he had performed so many works of mercy (Tob. xii. 14). 
Tabitha was raised from the dead by St. Peter because of the good 
works and almsdeeds which she did (Acts ix. 36, seq.). David ex- 
claims : " Blessed is he that understandeth concerning the needy 
and the poor; the Lord will deliver him in the evil day " (Ps. xl. 1). 
Throughout the Scriptures we constantly find instances of blessings 
being the reward of almsgiving. 

4. Almsgiving is a means of obtaining a speedy answer to 
prayer. 

The angel said to Cornelius : " Thy prayers and thy alms are 
ascended for a memorial in the sight of God " (Acts x. 4) . Listen to 
the voice of the poor, if you would have God listen to your voice. 
By nothing do we gain access to God so readily as by showing mercy. 
Alms, like fasting, is one of the wings on which prayer soars to 
heaven. 

5. By almsgiving we make the poor our friends; they pray 
for us, and their prayers have great power with God. 

The ancients of the Jews besought Our Lord on behalf of the 
centurion at Capharnaum who had built them a synagogue; and 
immediately He complied with their request (Luke vii. 3-5). The 
poor of Joppe prayed for Tabitha; she was restored to life (Acts ix. 
39). God Himself declares that the prayer of the poor is always 
heard (Ps. xxi. 25; Ixviii. 34). The petitions of those who are in 
heaven are, however, more effectual. Thus Our Lord bids us : " Make 
unto you friends of the mammon of iniquity, that when you shall 
fail, they may receive you into everlasting dwellings " (Luke xvi. 9). 
Therefore never refuse an alms to the poor. 



XII. THE DUTY OF GRATITUDE. 

Our Lord says : " It is better to give than to receive." And why ? 
Because the one who receives is bound to give thanks, whereas the 
giver has a right to a reward. 

1. For every act of mercy done to us, we are bound to render 
thanks first to God and then to our benefactor; for God requires 
of us that we should be grateful for the benefits we receive. 

It is our duty to be grateful ; i.e., to show our sense of the benefit 
conferred upon us, and to endeavor to repay oin* benefactor. Grati- 



430 7^6 Commandments, 

tude is due to almiglity God in the first place, because from Him 
comes down every best gift and every perfect gift (Jas. i. 17). Men 
are His servants, the instruments He employs; therefore we owe 
thanks to them in the second place. Whenever Our Lord received a 
favor from His heavenly Father He raised His eyes to heaven, and 
said : " Father, I thank Thee." This He did at the raising of Lazarus 
(John xi. 41). He never rose from table without giving thanks; 
after the Last Supper a hymn was said. All the saints did the 
same. David exclaims: "What shall I render to the Lord for all 
the things that He hath rendered unto me?" (Ps. cxv. 3.) The 
first words Tobias uttered when he was cured of his blindness were 
these: "I bless Thee, O Lord God of Israel, because Thou hast 
chastised me and Thou hast saved me" (Tob. xi. 17). Noe's first 
act when he came out of the ark was to build an altar to the Lord 
and offer sacrifice (Gen. viii.). Coliunbus, when he beheld the con- 
tinent of America, gave thanks to God; and in gratitude to Him 
he gave the name of San Salvador to the first island on which he 
set foot, and erected a cross on its shores. Accustom yourself to 
repeat the words Deo gratias or the Gloria Patri whenever any 
benefit is conferred on you. It is also incumbent on j'/ to return 
thanks to your human benefactors as well as to God. Oavid wished 
to take with him to Jerusalem and entertain at his court the wealthy 
old man who provided him with sustenance in the canvp during the 
period of Absalom's rebellion. And on Berzellai cieclining the 
honor, on account of his advanced age, the king took Ms sons with 
him instead, and showed them every kindness; and on hi^s death-bed 
he bade Solomon to be mindful of his obligations to their father, 
and let them eat at his table (3 Kings ii. 7). Tobias wished St. 
Raphael to accept half of all the things they had brought back from 
their journey (Tob. xii. 5). Even brute beasts show gratitude: wit- 
ness the well-known story of Androcles and the lion. It is the will 
of God that we should in all things give thanks (1 Thess. v. 18). 
Our Lord was much displeased with the nine lepers because they did 
not turn back to thank him (Luke xvii. 17). Almighty God fre- 
quently complains by the mouth of the prophets of the ingratitude 
of mankind : " The ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's 
crib; but Israel hath not known Me" (Is. i. 3). St. Paul repeatedly 
exhorts the Christians to give thanks (Eph. v. 20; Col. iii. 15). 

2. By our gratitude we obtain fresh favors, whereas ingrati- 
tude brings misfortunes upon us. 

The husbandman scatters fresh seed in the fertile soil, knowing 
that it will yield an abundant harvest. God acts in a similar 
manner : nothing pleases Him more than thankfulness for His bene- 
fits. Gratitude for past favors prepares us for favors to come. God 
notices and takes especial care of those who acknowledge and appre- 
ciate His gifts (Ps. xlix. 23). Ingratitude, on the other hand, dams 
up the stream of divine grace; he deserves no fresh favors who is 
not at the pains to return thanks for those he has received already. 
Ingratitude is a hindrance to salvation; St. Bernard expresses the 
opinion that nothing is so displeasing to God as unthankfulness, 
especially on the part of His own favored children. He that ren- 
dereth evil for good, evil shall not depart from his house (Prov. xvii. 



The Poverty of the Christian 431 

13). Judas had received the greatest kindness from Our Lord, yet 

he betrayed Him, and how terrible was his end ! The grateful soul 
is a friend of God; whereas the devil takes possession of the thank- 
less. 

Ingratitude is a mark of ill-breeding and a bad disposition. 

It is vain to look for gratitude from the world; its votaries take 
as their right the benefits conferred on them; they repay them with 
ingratitude, nay, more, they return evil for good. How thankless 
was Achitophel, who after sitting at King David's table, and basking 
in the royal favor, joined in Absalom's revolt! Of this David com- 
plained bitterly (Ps. liv. 13 seq.). Those who are ungrateful to their 
fellow-men are yet more so towards God. "He who loveth not his 
brother whom he seeth, how can he love God Whom he seeth not ? " 
(1 John iv. 20.) However trifling the gift may be, show yourself 
thankful for it. 



Xni. THE POVERTY OF THE CHRISTIAN. 

God does not distribute talents to all alike; to one He gives five, 
to another two, to a third only one (Matt. xxv). It is in wisdom 
that He thus acts; for if the same were given to all, every one could 
stand alone, and there would be no need of mutual good offices. 
What opportunity would there be for the exercise of brotherly love, 
what occasions of merit? 

1. Poverty is no disgrace in God's sight; to be poor in vir- 
tue and in good works is the only thing of which one need be 
ashamed, for it leads to eternal damnation. 

In the eyes of eternal Truth poverty is not the slightest shame 
(Lev. xiii.). Our Lord Himself being rich, became poor (2 Cor. viii. 
9). He Who was the King of heaven and of earth passed His life 
in constant privations; He had not where to lay His head (Luke ix. 
68). What could exceed the poverty of His birthplace! A man 
may be poor in this world's goods and exceedingly rich before God; 
and on the other hand, a man may be rich in earthly possessions and 
utterly destitute before God (Luke xii. 21). "The fear of God is 
the glory of the rich" (Ecclus. x. 25). Virtues, not earthly 
treasures, constitute true riches. " He," says St. Augustine, " is not 
rich who possesses chests full of silver and gold, but he in whom 
God dwells, who is the temple of the Holy Ghost." 

2. The poor save their souls more easily than the rich. 

Our Lord declares that it is easier for a camel to pass through 
the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom 
of heaven (Matt. xix. 24). Wealth affords its possessor the means 
of gratifying every inordinate desire. It is otherwise with the poor; 
they have not this occasion of sin. Just as a traveller goes on his way 
more easily if he is not encumbered with baggage, so the poor man 
is less impeded on his journey to the goal whither he is bound. The 
pugilist overthrows his opponent with greater facility when he is 
stripped to the waist; so the poor man is better prepared to resist 



432 The Commandments, 

the temptations of the devil. Consequently many of the poor will 
have a higher place in the kingdom of heaven than their richer 
brethren. Christ says: "Many that are first shall be last, and the 
last first" (Mark x. 31). Lazarus after his death was carried to 
Abraham's bosom, while Dives was buried in hell. 

3. God often sends poverty upon a man for his salvation. 

Many, if they were rich, would misuse their wealth, lead a vicious 
life, and be eternally lost. This God foresees, and therefore He takes 
their earthly possessions from them. " Poverty and riches are from 
God" (Ecclus. xi. 14). St. Antoninus, Archbishop of Florence, saw 
angels descending and ascending around a certain house; on hearing 
that the inmates were a poor widow with three daughters, he made 
them a liberal allowance. Later on he saw evil spirits coming and 
going about that same house; he made inquiries and learned that the 
people he had assisted now led an idle and dissolute life. Thereupon 
he immediately withdrew his gift. God deals in like manner with us. 
What does the schoolmaster do if he sees one of his scholars playing 
with a toy instead of learning his lesson? Or a father, if he sees 
a knife in the hand of a very young child? 

4. The poor are beloved by God. 

Those who are unhappy and forsaken in this world are especially 
dear to God. Christ calls the poor blessed (Matt. v. 3). He invites 
all that labor and are burdened to come to Him, that He may re- 
fresh them (Matt. xi. 28) ; the oppressed and persecuted are the 
objects of His peculiar favor (Matt. v. 10). These truths ought to 
serve as an encouragement to the poor, and repress the pride of the 
opulent and powerful. To the poor first of all the Gospel is preached 
(Matt. xi. 5). The offerings of the poor are more acceptable to God 
than those of the rich. Our Lord said the widow's mite was of 
greater value than all the gifts that the rich cast into the treasury 
(Mark xii. 41-43). God promises to hear the cry of the oppressed 
(Jas. V. 4). The poor shepherds were privileged to see the Infant 
Christ, not the rich Pharisees and Scribes. There is no respect of 
persons with God (Rom. ii. 11). Poor and rich are alike His chil- 
dren (Prov. xxii. 2). 

5. The poor man who leads an upright life will never be 
forsaken by God; nay, more, he will enjoy happiness and con- 
tentment in this world. 

God Who feeds the birds of the air, and clothes the lilies and grass 
of the field, will also provide for man, who is of so much more value 
than they (Matt. v. 25-30). God does not allow the just to want the 
necessaries of life. Our Lord says : " Seek ye first the kingdom of 
God and His justice, [i.e., be solicitous for your salvation and keep 
the commandments] and all these things [i.e., the wherewithal to 
live] shall be added unto you" (Matt. vi. 33). David says: "I have 
been young, and now am old, and I have not seen the just forsaken, 
nor his seed seeking bread" (Ps. xxxvi. 25). When we read that by 
God's permission, just men, such as Job, Tobias, Joseph, fell into 
destitution and distress, we also read that in God's good time they 



The Poverty of the Christian. 433 

were restored to ease and plenty. Virtue is generally attended by 
temporal blessings here below (Ps. cxi. 2-3). A poor man may 
be very happy despite his poverty. Happiness by no means consists 
in the abundance of things that one possesses (Luke xii. 15), but in 
interior peace and content, and these the just man enjoys, whether 
he be rich or noor. St. Paul speaks of himself as having nothing, 
and yet possessing all things (2 Cor. vi. 10). 

6. The poor are not warranted in wresting from the rich the 
alms which they have a right to expect; they should rather 
bear their lot patiently and rely on help from God. 

The duty of giving alms is not required by justice, except in 
cases of dire necessity. It is a duty of Christian charity, conse- 
quently no man can lawfully be compelled to give. The Fathers 
of the Church constantly exhorted the rich to give alms. " Thou art 
master of thy property, and canst give or not give at thy will," St. 
Jerome said to the rich : " Distribute a portion of thy wealth. But if 
thou refusest, I cannot force thee. I can only entreat." The poor 
can however demand that their labor be sufficiently remunerated. 
Doubly indeed is that poor man to be commiserated who forsakes 
God and transgresses His law; for in that case he has nothing 
in this life, and after death everlasting perdition awaits him. 



B. GOOD WORKS, VIRTUE, 

SIN, VICE. 



Hitherto the will of God (the commandments) has heen the sub- 
ject treated of. In the following pages we shall speak of the ful- 
filment of the divine will and the transgression thereof. Good works 
are the result of the accomplishment of the divine will; sin is the 
result of the violation of it. By the repeated performance of good 
works the habit of virtue is formed; by repeated acts of sia, the habit 
of vice. 

I. GOOD WOKKS. 

1. The name of good works is given to such voluntary actions 
on the part of man as are in conformity with the will of God, 
are performed for the love of God, and consequently will be re- 
warded by God. 

'Ko action, however excellent, is to be called a good work unless it 
is voluntary. The compulsory fast of a criminal in prison is not a 
good work ; nor in fact is any action which is not in accordance with 
the will of God. To spend one's time in reciting long prayers, in- 
stead of accomplishing the duties of one's station, is not a good 
work, but a sin. l^or do works which fail in any one particular to 
correspond to the will of God deserve to be called good works, or to 
receive a reward. Those actions again, which are not performed for 
the love of God are not good works. God requires a pure motive on 
our part. For instance, to give an alms to an importunate beggar 
merely to get rid of him is not wrong, but it is not a perfect good 
work. It is an imperfect or natural good work, because it is done 
from natural motives. But an action performed for God's sake, be- 
cause it is the will of God, for love of Christ, in view of an eternal 
reward or for fear of everlasting punishment, is a perfect, or super- 
natural good work, and will bear fruit, because it is done in union 
with Christ (as the branch bears fruit that abides in the vine, John 
XV. 4), and participates in His merits. A plain woollen cloth has a 
certain worth, but if it be dyed a rich purple color, its value is 
greatly enhanced. So the good works we perform are of little worth 
imless they are done for God's sake. Then they are crimsoned with 

434 



Good Works, 435 

the blood of Christ, precious in God's sight, and deserving of a celes- 
tial recompense. 

Actions, although good, if performed for merely natural mo- 
tives, are worthless in God's sight. 

The Pharisees in Christ's time are a striking instance of this, 
for they did good works to be seen of men and praised by men. Our 
Lord blames them for this, and says : " They have received their 
reward" (Matt. vi. 2). If a man subscribes to some charitable ob- 
ject, in order to get his name into the papers, or to get some office 
of trust, he does not perform a good work, or one deserving of reward. 
Such works are like a great, empty package which, when put into 
the balance at the Judgment Day, will have no weight at all. " Man 
seeth those things that appear, but the Lord beholdeth the heart " (1 
Kings xvi. 7). It is the intention to which one must look, not the 
external act ; this may appear to be good, but if it is not done in some 
way in view of our final end, it is worse than useless. He who seeks 
his own glory in what he does is a thief, for he robs God of what is 
His due. Some people say we ought to do good for its own sake. 
They are mistaken, for the act itself is not our highest aim, but a 
means towards the attainment of that end. We ought to do good 
for God's sake. 

A good work has all the more value in God's sight, the less 
it is done in hope of earthly reward. 

He who does good to the poor who cannot requite him, does a work 
which is great in God's eyes, however contemptible it may be in the 
eyes of the world, because it is done for God. Good works which cost 
us a great sacrifice are more valuable than others. For this reason 
Abraham's obedience in promptly offering his only son at God's 
command was so highly praised. Therefore what we do in spite of 
outward contradiction or inward opposition has more worth before 
God. Thus the value of our works depends entirely upon whether 
they are or are not done for the love of God. He does not consider 
the magnitude of the work, but the amount of love wherewith it is 
performed. 

2. The good works most pleasing in God's sight are these: 
Prayer, fasting, and almsdeeds. 

By these works the centurion Cornelius merited the praise of the 
angel (Acts x.), and Tobias the approval of Raphael (Tob. xii. 8). 
In the sermon on the mount Our Lord lays special stress on these 
works (Matt. vi.). Prayer includes every kind of divine worship, 
the reception of the sacraments, hearing Mass, attending sermons, 
etc. Fasting is not merely abstaining from food, or some sort of 
food, but the repression of sensual desires in general, e.g., restrain- 
ing curiosity, the avoidance of idle conversation, denying one's self 
some pleasure. As alms may be reckoned every service rendered to 
one's neighbor, pre-eminently the spiritual and corporal works of 
mercy. 

Prayer, fasting, and almsgiving are the principal means of 



436 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

attaining perfection, because they combat the three evil appe- 
tites, the concupiscence of the flesh, the concupiscence of the 
eyes, and the pride of life; and thus the soul is enabled to rise 
more freely to God. 

By prayer the pride of life is suppressed, by fasting the craving 
for sensual enjoyment, by almsgiving the desire for earthly riches. 
Thus by prayer, fasting, and almsdeeds, more than by anything else, 
we shake off the bonds of earth and consequently draw nearer to God. 

3. Even the most trifling works are pleasing to God if they 
are done with the intention of promoting His glory. 

St. Paul exhorts us : " Whether you eat or drink, or whatsoever else 
you do, do all to the glory of God" (1 Cor. x. 31). This includes 
work, recreation, sleep, etc. Midas, King of Phrygia, is said to have 
asked of the gods that whatsoever he touched might be turned to gold. 
This power is granted to the Christian ; for by purity of intention all 
his good works do in reality become golden, i.e., supernatural, and 
consequently highly valuable and meritorious. The intention deter- 
mines the worth of every action. Witness the kiss Judas gave Our 
Lord; a kiss is a token of love and friendship, but his evil intention 
made it a vile action. The intention is to the action what the root 
is to the tree. If the root is healthy the tree flourishes and its fruit 
is good; but if the root is unsound, the sap does not circulate or the 
fruit mature. The decorations of the streets when a monarch makes 
his entry into a city, are a matter of no moment to him, except in so 
far as they display the affection and loyal devotion of his subjects. 
So it is with the actions we perform for the glory of God. Be care- 
ful therefore to direct your intention every morning, and renew it 
occasionally throughout the day. An action without a good inten- 
tion is like a body in which the life is extinct. 

4. Good works are necessary to salvation. 

Our Lord says : " Every tree that doth not yield good fruit shall 
be cut down and cast into the fire" (Matt. iii. 10). At the Last 
Judgment He will require good works of us. Remember the parable 
of the barren fig-tree (Luke xiii. 6) ; of the ten virgins (Matt, xxv.), 
and of the talents (v. 16). God is not satisfied with mere integrity 
of life (which consists in not being guilty of murder, or theft, or 
cheating, or evil practices of any kind) . At the Last Judgment many 
will be sentenced to everlasting misery, not because they have done 
what is evil, but because they have not done what is good. St. John 
Chrysostom says that to do no good is tantamount to doing evil. 
Heaven is the recompense of labor; he that has done no work can 
claim no guerdon. If you had a servant who did not indeed steal 
your goods, but who neglected his work, would you not dismiss him? 
Look to it, therefore, that you appear not before God with empty hands. 
Every man has three friends: (1), Money, which is taken from him 
by death; (2), Relatives, who part from him at the grave; (3), Good 
works, which alone follow him to the judgment seat of God (Apoc. 
xiv. 13). By good works we may make sure our calling and election 
(2 Pet. i. 10). Good works are like bulwarks which protect the city 



Good Worhs, 437 

from hostile incursions. On account of our good works God grants 
U8 the grace of perseverance, or, if we fall into grievous sin, actual 
graces to bring us to repentance (2 Par. xix. 3). The prophet 
Nathan was sent to David after he fell into sin; Our Lord looked 
with compassion on St. Peter after his fall. 

6. Through good works the sinner obtains the actual graces 
which are necessary for his conversion; the just man obtains an 
increase of sanctifying grace, eternal felicity, and the remission 
of the temporal penalty of sin ; furthermore his prayers are heard, 
and sometimes earthly blessings are bestowed on him. 

The good works performed by the sinner contribute to his conver- 
sion. When our hemisphere is turned towards the sun, we experi- 
ence light and warmth. So it is with the sinner; when by good works 
he turns from creatures to the Creator his mind is enlightened, his 
heart is softened, and he enters upon a new life. The prayer of the 
sinner, although without merit, earns the grace of pardon; it has 
power with God, not on account of the merit of the petitioner, but on 
account of the divine promise: "Every one who asketh receiveth." 
The good works of the sinner will not in themselves be rewarded here- 
after, but are only conducive to his conversion. By his good works 
the just man obtains an increase of sanctifying grace and eternal 
felicity. Our Lord says: "Every branch in Me that beareth fruit. 
My Father will purge it, that it may bring forth more fruit" 
(John XV. 2). " To every one that hath shall be given, and he shall 
abound" (Luke xix. 26). By these words Christ signifies that the 
sanctifying grace which he already possesses will be increased. He 
also receives new actual graces. Christ promises as the reward of 
good works a hundredfold and life eternal. As the good works of 
the just are rewarded hereafter they are called living works. The 
more good works he has done in time, the greater will be his felicity 
to all eternity. Our Lord says : " The Son of man shall come in the 
glory of His Father with His angels, and then will be rendered to 
every man according to his works" (Matt. xvi. 27). St. Paul de- 
clares : " He that soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly " (2 Cor. 
ix. 6). The Council of Florence asserts that all the redeemed in 
heaven enjoy the beatific vision of the triune God, but in a different 
degree of perfection, according as their merits are greater or less. 
Good works cancel the penalty due to sin, because on account of 
original sin it is difficult to man to perform them, and the devil seeks 
to deter him from them. The monks of a certain convent, having risen 
early to pray, beheld to their astonishment a number of demons ap- 
proaching, who said to them : " If you will but betake yourselves to 
your beds again, we will immediately go away." Inasmuch as good 
works are onerous to perform, they make satisfaction for sin, and 
appease the retributive justice of God; inasmuch as they conduce to 
the honor of God and the welfare of our fellow-men, they are meri- 
torious, and serve to glorify the remunerative justice of God. They 
also exalt the loving kindness of God, for they procure for us a gra- 
cious answer to our petitions. The temporal reward of good deeds 
consists generally in the increase of riches, the improvement of 
health, the prolongation of life, the esteem of men, and above all 
interior peace and joy, etc. 



438 Good Worksy Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

He who commits a mortal sin, loses the merit of the good 
works he has done in the past. 

" If the just man turn himself away from his justice, and do ini- 
quity, all his justices that he hath done shall not be remembered" 
(Ezech. xviii. 24). But when the sin has been washed away in the 
Sacrament of Penance, the good works of the past are revivified, as the 
leaves come out again in the spring sunshine. It is not so with sins ; 
once forgiven, they are effaced completely. How great is the mercy 
of our God ! 

6. We can apply to others, either to the living or to the dead, 
the merit of our good works. 

Thus we can offer the holy sacrifice of the Mass, communion, 
fasts or ahnsdeeds for others. In this manner the good work, inas- 
much as it be satisfactory or propitiatory, benefits another ; the merit 
of it, however, remains with the doer. Nor is it wholly lost to us as a 
satisfaction for sin, for in applying it to another we perform a work 
of mercy, and works of mercy procure for us remission of sin and 
entitle us to an eternal reward. Hence we see that in applying good 
works to others they are of twofold value. 

7. We ought to let our good works be seen of men, in order 
to set them a good example. 

In the life of St. Pachomius we see how powerful is the effect of 
good example. When a soldier, he was quartered in a Christian 
family. Here he was treated with the greatest kindness, and the 
behavior of all the members of the household was so exemplary, 
that he was vastly impressed by it, and was led to inquire into and 
finally embrace the Christian religion. Pachomius was an active 
promoter of monasticism in Egypt. Our Lord admonishes us to let 
our light shine before men, so that they may see our good works, and 
glorify Our Father Who is in heaven (Matt. v. 16). It is His will 
that our influence should make itself felt by those around us ; that by 
our light we should illumine the darkness, and become teachers and 
guides to our brethren. The Christian should not only be a burning 
but also a shining light, that he may be of use to others. At the same 
time all works of an extraordinary nature should be hidden, such as 
praying with one's arms outspread, rigorous fasting, etc. All singu- 
larity is to be avoided, it is a fault whereby piety is made ridiculous 
and contemptible. But those works which are binding on all, such as 
the reception of the sacraments, should not be done in secret. If 
Christ denounced those who give scandal, what a rich blessing must 
be in store for those who by their edifying and virtuous life lead 
others into the right way ! 

8. We ought to make diligent use of our earthly riches, as 
well as of our life here below, for the performance of good 
works. 

We ought to make friends by means of our wealth, that after our 
death they may receive us into everlasting dwellings (Luke xvi. 9). 
On how short a span of this transitory life our whole eternity de- 



Virtue. 439 

pends! (St. Jerome.) "We ought to work while it is day; the night 
Cometh when no man can work " (John ix. 4). The period of man's 
existence upon earth is his seed-time. The lost in hell would give up 
all the treasures of the world, for one short moment to spend as they 
please in which to reconcile themselves with God. How foolish are 
those who pursue sensual pleasures instead of doing good works I 
They are like men who, in a gold mine, pick up stones and earth in- 
stead of the precious metal. You are sorry if perchance you have 
spent a small sum of money unwisely, but you consider it no matter 
for regret to have wasted a whole day in the service of the devil. The 
hour will come when we shall become alive to the inestimable value 
of time, but alas, it will come too late! 

II. VIRTUE. 

1. Virtue consists in proficiency in the practice of good works 
and the tendency of the will towards what is good, resulting from 
persevering exercise. 

By good deeds is meant whatever is done in obedience to the will of 
God, or is pleasing in His sight. By practice in writing, painting, 
athletic and other sports, etc., proficiency and dexterity is attained, 
and the will becomes disposed towards the action in question. Prac- 
tice makes perfect. Habit is second nature. It is difficult to break 
off any habit to which we have accustomed ourselves. One or two 
isolated good deeds do not constitute virtue, any more than two or 
three vines constitute a vineyard. 

Certain good qualities or propensities, the gift either of na- 
ture or of grace, are often called by the name of virtue. 

There are natural, inborn good qualities, dispositions or virtues. 
Many men are naturally meek, obedient, liberal or honorable. Hence 
it is that some of the heathen were distinguished for their virtues. 
There are also supernatural dispositions, which are imparted by the 
Holy Spirit when we receive sanctifying grace, that is, the Sacrament 
of Baptism or of Penance. The Holy Spirit renders us capable of 
accomplishing what is good for the love of God. This supernatural 
capability is something more than a mere qualification for the per- 
formance of what is good ; a certain inclination thereto is also given 
us. But this disposition or inclination is not the same as proficiency or 
ease in the exercise of virtue; the latter must be won by practice. 
The capabilities imparted by the Holy Ghost stand in the same rela- 
tion to actual virtue as the seed does to the plant, or the gift of one 
of the senses, e.g., the sense of sight, to the use of that sense. The 
good dispositions imparted by the Holy Spirit are also called infused 
virtue, and the proficiency attained through practice is called 
acquired virtue. The powers imparted by the Holy Spirit do not at 
once cause us to act aright; it is requisite for us to employ them 
frequently in order to gain proficiency in virtue. 

2. It is only perfect virtue, i.e., those acts of virtue which 
are performed for the glory of God, which will be rewarded after 
death. 



440 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

God does not merely require of us good deeds, but a good inten- 
tion in accomplishing those deeds. Only when done with good in- 
tention, with a view to His glory, are they pleasing to Him, and en- 
titled to a reward. Without the love of God there is no true virtue. 
The actions we perform for the love of God are acts of perfect, 
supernatural. Christian virtue. There are, as we have seen, natural 
virtues, which are inspired by earthly motives and are not done with 
a view to the glory of God. These only receive a temporal recom- 
pense (Matt. vi. 2), and have no value for the kingdom of heaven 
(Matt. V. 20). The difference between natural and supernatural 
virtues may be compared to the difference which exists between 
objects which are merely gilt, and those that are fashioned out of 
solid gold. 

3. Virtue can only be acquired and increased by dint of strug- 
gle and self -conquest ; for many obstacles have to be encountered, 
inward hindrances, the evil proclivities of the human heart, and 
outward hindrances, the contempt and persecution of men. 

Nothing else is wanted to cause a boat which is launched on a fast- 
flowing river, to be carried away by the stream and swallowed up 
in the waters, than that the rowers should cease to ply their oars; 
but if the boat is going against the current, strenuous exertion on the 
part of the crew is required to bring it to its destination. So it is 
with man; he needs but to give way to the frailty of his corrupt 
nature to be borne to eternal perdition; but to contend against the 
force of his passions, the seductions of the world, and the tempta- 
tions of the devil, and guide his bark to the haven of everlasting feli- 
city, calls for no slight effort on his part. " The kingdom of heaven 
suffereth violence" (Matt. xi. 12). The path of virtue is a difficult 
ascent, not an easy descent. Virtue is won not in times of peace, 
but of warfare. Many appear to be virtuous, but are not so in 
reality, because their virtue costs them nothing. Those who desire 
to attain proficiency in an art, or dexterity in a trade, must give 
themselves much trouble in learning it. Only in proportion as you 
do violence to yourself will you make progress in virtue. The most 
formidable obstacles have to be overcome at first, afterwards advance- 
ment becomes more easy. And as we advance in virtue, it brings 
happiness, and thus we are stimulated to greater efforts. But suffer- 
ing is inseparable from virtue; wherefore he who shrinks from suf- 
ferings and persecution will never be rich in virtue. " He who fears 
the world," says St. Ignatius, "will never accomplish anything 
worthy of God's acceptance; for nothing great can be done in God's 
service without provoking the enmity of the world." He who strives in 
earnest to attain to virtue, will necessarily be humble, for he will 
feel his own frailty, as one who climbs a steep ascent becomes con- 
scious of his bodily weakness. Consequently the most virtuous are 
the most humble. 

4. Virtue procures for us real happiness both in time and in 
eternity. 

The Greeks related of Heracles, one of their heroes, that at a spot 
where two roads met he found two maidens awaiting him. Pleasure 
and Virtue. The former spoke flattering words to him and promised 



Virtue, 441 

him a life of enjoyment. The latter gravely warned him that many 
sorrows awaited him, but they would be followed by an everlasting 
reward. Heracles wisely followed where this one guided him. Sin, 
although it leads to perdition, is unquestionably most alluring; virtue 
is difficult and laborious, but it is attended with blessings. The fear 
of the Lord, the practice of virtue, is the way to attain true happiness 
even on earth (Ps. cxxvii. 1). "Much peace have they that love Thy 
law" (Ps. cxviii. 165). Above all, the virtuous man will have joy 
at his latter end (Ecclus. vi. 29). How joyfully St. Paul spoke of his 
approaching dissolution (2 Tim. iv. 7). Nothing can really harm one 
who loves God; all things, however adverse they appear, work 
together unto good (Eom. viii. 28). Many temporal blessings are 
bestowed on him (Ps. cxxvii. 4) ; he is compared by the Psalmist to 
a tree planted by running waters. A virtuous life contributes to 
one's physical well-being ; the practice of virtue, moreover, enlightens 
the understanding, and gives intelligence of the teaching of Christ. 
He Himself says : " If any man will do the will of God, he shall 
know of the doctrine whether it be of God" (John vii. 17). The 
practice of virtue entitles us to eternal salvation (Ps. xxxvi. 29). 
Godliness has promise of the life that now is and of that which is to 
come (1 Tim. iv. 8). Virtue makes us rich and honorable in God's 
sight. She is to be preferred before kingdoms and thrones, and 
riches are nothing in comparison with her (Wisd. vii. 8). It is a 
Treasure which cannot decay or be stolen from us (Matt. vi. 20). 
Noble ancestry, high position, does not make us renowned before God ; 
virtue alone procures for us immortal honors, eternal riches, never- 
ending felicity. 

5. Virtue makes us resemble God, and admits us to the 
friendship of God. 

If we are humble, gentle, generous, and otherwise virtuous, we 
shall be like to almighty God, in Whom is the perfection of every 
virtue. We should therefore be careful to study the divine attri- 
butes, that we may imitate them and become true children of our 
heavenly Father. The virtuous man is a friend of God, for Our 
Lord says : " Whosoever shall do the will of My Father that is in 
heaven, he is My brother, and sister, and mother" (Matt. xii. 50). 
Similarity of tastes and feelings makes men friends. Virtue renders 
us beautiful in God's sight. Physical beauty is deceitful and vain 
(Prov. xxxi. 30) ; true beauty is that of the heart. All the glory of 
the king's daughter is within (Ps. xliv. 14). This loveliness is not 
apparent now, but it will be made visible one day. In winter all 
the trees are bare, though they are not lifeless, but when the sum- 
mer comes they are clothed with verdant foliage. So the virtuous 
now appear insignificant and contemptible, for their true glory, 
their inner life, is hidden from human ken. But when this life is 
done, those who were counted dead shall shine as the sun in the 
kingdom of their Father (Matt. xiii. 43), while the wicked who were 
deemed happy shall mourn and weep. Virtue alone makes us true 
Christians. The seal of Baptism is not enough, nor even the sacer- 
dotal robe. A Christian without virtue is a husk without a kernel, 
a ppring without water, a vine without grapes. In vain do we call 
ourselves Christians, if we are not imitators of Christ. 



442 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 



The Different Kinds of Christian Virtue, 

One and the self-same virtue has reference to different ob- 
jects and consequently receives different names. 

Many virtues, such as liberality or prudence, are lauded by men 
©f the world; others, such as meekness, humility, love of one's ene^ 
mies, are regarded by them with contempt. In some virtues the 
understanding is the chief factor, as in faith; in others, the will, as 
in temperance. 

1. The virtues that unite our soul to God are the three theo- 
logical virtues : Paith, Hope, Charity. 

These three virtues are symbolized by a flame; faith is signified 
by the light it emits, hope by its upward tendency, and charity by the 
heat it radiates. A tree is also an emblem of these virtues : faith is 
its root, hope its stem, charity its fruit. Faith lays the foundation 
of the temple of God, hope raises the walls, and charity crowns the 
structure. The cross is a symbol of faith, the anchor of hope, while 
charity is denoted by a burning heart. The greatest of these virtues 
is charity (1 Cor. xiii. 13). Without charity, faith and hope are 
valueless, for God only grants eternal felicity to those that love 
Him. 

1. The three theological virtues are manifested in the fol- 
lowing manner: 

The effect produced by the virtue of Faith is to make us be- 
lieve in the existence of God and in His divine perfections. 

The effect of the virtue of Hope is to make us look for eternal 
salvation from God, as well as the means that are necessary for 
its attainment. 

The virtue of Charity causes us to find satisfaction in God, 
and to seek to please Him by keeping His commandments. 

2. These virtues are fitly termed theological, because God 
Himself is their object, their motive, and their Author. 

God is the object of faith; that is to say, we believe what God 
has revealed, and all that has reference to God Himself, to His being". 
His attributes. His works and His will. God is the motive of faith, 
for we believe that which He has revealed because He is omniscient 
and the highest truth. God is the object of hope; for we hope for 
eternal happiness after death, to see God and enjoy Him forever. 
God is the motive of hope, for we hope for eternal felicity because 
He is almighty, most bountiful, and faithful to His promises. God 
is the object of charity, for all our love centres in Him. God is the 
motive of charity, since we love Him because He is supreme beauty 
and sovereign goodness. God is also the Author of the three theo- 
logical virtues, as the following reasons demonstrate : 

3. "We receive the three theological virtues to render us 



Virtue. 443 

capable of performing good works simultaneously with sancti- 
fying grace. 

When the Holy Spirit enters into the soul, He transforms the 
powers of the mind, so that it can rise to God with greater facility. 
When He comes and imparts to us sanctifying grace, a light shines 
in our heart that awakens faith and hope (2 Cor. iv. 6), and a fire 
is ignited, that kindles a flame of charity (Rom. v. 5). This action 
of the Holy Ghost within the soul is called the infusion of the three 
theological virtues. The three theological virtues are infused into 
the soul (Council of Trent, 6, ch. 7). The infusion of these virtues 
has a similar effect as have the rays of the sun in imparting light 
and warmth to the atmosphere. God does not force these virtues upon 
us ; the freedom of the will is in no wise interfered with. The power 
of exercising the three theological virtues is imparted in Baptism, 
and if it be lost, it is given again in the Sacrament of Penance. As 
the seed lies dormant in the bosom of the earth, until, under the 
influence of sun and rain, it germinates and grows, so the three 
theological virtues at first lie dormant in the soul of the child until 
he attains the use of reason, and through the action of grace and 
religious instruction they are developed and come to sight (in works). 
The baptized child resembles one who is asleep, who possesses the 
power of sight, but sees nothing, until he awakens from sleep and 
makes use of that power. So the power to exercise faith, hope, and 
charity are latent in the soul of the child, until with the use of 
reason they are brought into play, and their existence is made ap- 
parent. 

4. We ought to make acts of the three theological virtues 
frequently in the course of our life, especially before approach- 
ing the sacraments and at the hour of death. 

The means of making acts of the three theological virtues is to 
place before the mind the object and the motive of these virtues. In 
doing so, it is well not to employ the usual formula, but to express 
one's self in one's own words. Every time we make the sign of the 
cross, utter a prayer, or do a good deed, we make implicitly at least, 
an act of one or more of these virtues. 

2. Those virtues which have the effect of bringing our actions 
into conformity with the moral law, are called moral virtues. 
These we gain for ourselves by our own exertions and the assist- 
ance of divine grace, after we have received sanctifying g^ace. 

These virtues are called moral virtues, because they order our 
actions in a manner pleasing to God. As the three theological vir- 
tues perfect our interior being, so the moral virtues perfect our ex- 
terior. The three theological virtues have immediate reference to 
God, the moral virtues bear in the first place upon our neighbor or 
upon ourselves. Liberality, for instance, has reference to our neigh- 
bor ; temperance in eating and drinking to ourselves exclusively. The 
three theological virtues were infused into us with sanctifying grace, 
whereas we have to gain for ourselves the moral virtues at the cost 
of our own labor, and with the timely aid of divine grace. At Bap- 



444 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

tism, it is true, our will is disposed by the inspiration of the Holy 
Ghost to the practice of the moral virtues ; yet the habit of their prac- 
tice must be acquired by repeated good deeds, and the conquest 
of our evil proclivities. At Baptism the seed of moral virtue was 
implanted in the field of our heart; we must diligently cultivate 
that field if the seed is to bear fruit. At the same time we need the 
sun of God's grace, the vivifying influence of the Holy Spirit, or our 
labor will be in vain. 

3. The principal moral virtues are the seven capital virtues: 
Humility, obedience, meekness, liberality, temperance, chastity, 
diligence in what is good. 

Humility concerns our honor, obedience our liberty, meekness and 
patience the attitude of the soul, liberality has reference to our 
property, temperance in eating and drinking and chastity to our 
bodies, diligence in what is good to our work. Among these virtues 
meekness and liberality ought pre-eminently to mark the Christian, 
and for this reason Christ speaks of His followers as sheep or lambs, 
because the sheep is the most patient and harmless of animals. The 
seven capital virtues are opposed to the seven capital or deadly sins. 

4. All the moral virtues proceed from the four cardinal vir- 
tues: Prudence, justice, temperance, and fortitude (Wisd. viii. 7). 

The four fundamental virtues are called cardinal virtues, from 
the word cardo, a hinge, because all our moral actions turn on them 
as a door turns upon its hinges. They are called fundamental virtues 
because the whole fabric of virtue rests upon them; they are the 
cornerstones of the edifice of Christian virtue. The four cardinal 
virtues are inseparable parts of each and every virtue; on them all 
the moral virtues rest, for instance moderation in eating and drink- 
ing and meekness spring from temperance, diligence is what is good 
from fortitude, etc. These four virtues may be said to be the parents 
of every other virtue. Prudence is a virtue of the understanding, 
justice of the will. Temperance and fortitude support the will. Pru- 
dence fixes its gaze upon heaven; temperance seeks what is eternal 
and employs temporal things only as a means of attaining what it 
seeks; fortitude allows no obstacles to hinder it from attaining its 
goal. The philosophers of antiquity recognized the value of temper- 
ance and fortitude; they asserted that to renounce and to endure 
was the compendium of all worldly wisdom, for they considered that 
the practice of these two virtues would preserve a man from sin 
and conduct him to supreme felicity. 

1. Prudence is the capacity of the intellect to apprehend the 
good things of eternity and the means of attaining to them. 

That is the truest prudence which can best distinguish what is 
divine from what is human. The prudent man always looks to his 
final end. Like a wise merchant who thinks continually of what 
profit he can make, the Christian's thoughts are fixed upon gaining 
wches for eternity. The serpent looks out afar, and exposes its body 
if only it can shield its head ; so the Christian keeps the end of life 
always in view, and scorns earthly things in order to preserve its true 



Virtue, 445 

treasure. Our Lord bids us "Be wise as serpents" (Matt. x. 16). 
How cleverly the saints contrived to carry out their undertakings and 
obtain the end they desired! St. Paul displayed this prudence when 
he made use of the superscription he saw at Athens : " To the un- 
known God," to afford him an opportunity of preaching the Gospel 
(Acts xvii.). Prudence is a most important virtue, for the will is 
guided by the reason. If the understanding is not capable of judging 
between good and evil, the will deviates from the right way and 
transgresses the commandments. Prudence is said to be the eye of 
the soul (St. Thomas Aquinas), Without the light of the eye we 
cannot find our way, nor without prudence can we discern the path to 
heaven. Without the eye we cannot make full use of our limbs, nor 
without prudence can we practice virtue aright. Prudence is the rud- 
der that directs the course of the vessel; without it we shall make 
shipwreck of virtue. The contrary of prudence is worldly wisdom 
(Luke xvi. 8), or the wisdom of the flesh. The wisdom of this world 
consists in discerning what will bring a man temporal advantage 
or sensual enjoyment; this wisdom is foolishness with God (1 Cor. iii. 
191. 

2. Justice is the steadfast inclination of the will towards 
that which is just. 

Justice makes us willing to walk in the narrow path of the com- 
mandments; the just man dreads the slightest deviation from it. 
The foster-father of Christ was termed a just man. (The word just 
is often used to signify that one is in a state of grace, but in this 
sense it is not employed here.) The just man is upright, he gives 
to every one his due; to God he gives worship, to the authorities 
obedience; to his subordinates he metes out rewards and punish- 
ments; to his equals he shows fraternal charity. But as both from 
within and without he encounters opposition and obstacles, he needs 
temperance and fortitude to sustain him and regulate his actions. 

3. Through temperance man only makes use of temporal 
good things, in so far as is necessary for the attainment of those 
which are eternal. 

Por instance, a man does not eat or drink more than he needs 
to support life and preserve health and fulfil his duties. He does not 
strive with excessive eagerness after honors, pleasures, or other sen- 
sual enjoyments. He is like the eagle, that has its eyrie on the 
heights, and only descends to the valley in search of food. We 
should use this world as if we used it not (1 Cor. vii. 31). Would 
that every one could say with St. Francis of Sales : " I desire very 
little, and that little I desire but little." Temperance does not, how- 
ever, consist in refusing one's self what is necessary, and thus un- 
fitting one's self for good works; such temperance lacks prudence. 

4. Fortitude enables a man to make sacrifices willingly for 
the sake of attaining eternal riches. 

He who possesses the virtue of fortitude does not allow himself 
to be intimidated by ridicule, threats, or persecution. He is ready 
even, if need be, to suffer death. On the other hand he endured 



446 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

patiently all the afflictions that come upon him. In this he resembles 
the diamond that no stone can break. Fortitude is more strikingly- 
displayed in bearing great suffering than in undertaking great 
achievements, for suffering is more difficult than doing. An example 
of heroic fortitude is given us by the mother of the Machabees 
with her seven children, who "esteemed torments as nothing" (2 
Mach. vii. 12) ; by Abraham, who was ready to offer up his son Isaac; 
by Pope Leo the Great, who fearlessly went to meet Attila, the King 
of the Htms. No saint was ever a coward. The holy martyrs 
showed fortitude in its highest degree. There is the spurious for- 
titude of the reprobate; when a man cannot be made to desist from 
the love of transitory things by the chastisements of the Creator 
and pursues them at the cost of his life. 

5. All perfect virtues spring from the love of God and are in- 
separably united together by that same love (1 Cor. xiii.). 

As all the different branches of a tree grow from the same root, 
so the various virtues spring from the love of God. All virtue is 
rooted and grounded in charity (Eph. iii. 17). Charity may be called 
the queen of virtues, because it incites the will to the performance 
of good deeds ; as flowers of various hues are bound together to form 
a wreath, so the different virtues form a harmonious whole; only 
they cannot be severed one from the other, and the bond that unites 
them so closely is charity. 

Therefore he who is devoid of charity towards God does not 
possess a single perfect virtue; while he who has charity pos- 
sesses them all, if not all in the same degree. 

The love of God may fitly be compared to the sunshine. When in 
winter the sun withdraws its rays, the face of nature loses its beauty ; 
so in the absence of charity, virtue loses its supernatural beauty. 
But it is quite possible to possess imperfect, natural virtue without 
the love of God. For every man has by nature a certain inherent 
knowledge of what is good, and a desire for what is good, by reason 
of which he can perform many a good action and by habit acquire 
ease in the performance of it. One may also possess imperfect 
moral virtues without the love of God; this was the case with the 
pagans of antiquity, and now we often meet with people who are 
naturally gentle, abstemious, liberal, etc. Moreover, one may even 
possess imperfect theological virtues without the love of God. For 
faith can exist without hope, and both faith and hope without 
charity (Council of Trent, 6, Y, 23). For faith and hope can only 
be lost by falling into the sins opposed to them ; faith is lost through 
unbelief, hope by despair. But he who possesses the love of God 
possesses all and every virtue, if not all in an equal degree. As 
soon as the. sun shines upon the earth, the flowers, the meadows, all 
things are once more decked in their former beauty ; so when charity 
fills the soul, it will be adorned with all virtues ; supernatural divine 
virtues, worthy of an eternal recompense. All the saints possessed 
every single perfect virtue that there is, but they excelled in one 
more than in the others. Job possessed patience in a high degree, 
David the virtue of forgiveness, Abraham obedience, St. Aloysius was 



Virtue* 447 

remarkable for purity, St. Francis of Sales for meekness, St. Ignatius 
for zeal. 

He who is lacking in one single perfect virtue is devoid also 
of all the others, for he has not the love of God. And he who pos- 
sesses but one single perfect virtue, possesses all. 

One virtue alone is either no virtue at all, or an imperfect one. 
For instance, a man who is given to anger possesses neither the 
virtue of meekness, nor of liberality, nor of humility, nor any 
other. It is only natural virtues that are alone. For instance one 
may meet with an avaricious man who is gentle and meek. 

6. The greatest and noblest of all the virtues is charity. 

Because it alone ujiites man to God, it alone gives value to 
the other virtues, and it alone will last beyond the grave. 

The three theological virtues hold the highest place among the 
virtues because they have direct relation to God. Charity is the 
greatest of them, as St. Paul declares (1 Cor. xiii. 13). It takes 
precedence of all the rest, as fire does of the other elements, as gold 
of the other metals, as the seraphim do of the other angelic choirs — 
charity unites man to God. Our Lord says: "He that loveth Me 
shall be loved of My Father, and I will love him; we will come to 
him and will make our abode with him" (John xiv. 21, 23). Again, 
St. John says : " He that abideth in charity, abideth in God and God 
in him" (1 John iv. 16). Charity alone gives value to the other 
virtues. St. Paul declares that to speak with tongues, to possess all 
knowledge, to have the gift of prophecy and of miracles, to perform 
almsdeeds and austerities, profits nothing, for all these are worth- 
less unless inspired by charity (1 Cor. xiii. 1-3). Charity lasts beyond 
the grave; St. Paul tells us: "Charity never falleth away" (v. 8). 
Faith on the other hand passes into the vision of God; hope into 
the enjoyment of God. The moral virtues do indeed remain in the 
life to come, but in another and more excellent manner, for eternal 
blessedness does not destroy the perfection human nature has 
attained. 

7. The virtues can always be increased. 

Virtue resembles an estate, situated on the highest point of a 
mountain. He who is ascending this mountain is sometimes nearer, 
sometimes farther from the summit, and there are many travellers 
before and many behind him. For we do not always possess the 
same degree of virtue, neither do all men possess it in an equal 
measure. If any one has attained so high a degree of virtue that 
his state approximates to that of the blessed in heaven — nay more, 
if to a certain extent he becomes like unto God, that virtue is termed 
heroic. Heroes, among the ancients, were men who had achieved more 
than ordinary mortals could accomplish. For the beatification or 
canonization of any individual it is necessary to prove that he prac- 
tised the three theological and the four cardinal virtues in the ful- 
filment of the duties of his calling in an heroic degree. Heroic virtue 
is neither understood nor appreciated, but rather contemned by those 
who do not live a godly life. 



448 Good Worlcs, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

The three theological virtues are increased through the in- 
crease of sanctifying grace. 

That the increase of the three theological virtues is possible, we 
learn from the collect of the Thirteenth Sunday after Pentecost, in 
which the Church prays : " Almighty and everlasting God, give unto 
us an increase of faith, hope, and charity." If the atmosphere re- 
ceives more light and heat from the sun, we see more clearly and ex- 
perience more warmth. In like manner when grace is augmented in 
the soul, the power of belief becomes stronger and we are stimulated 
to the exercise of charity. We also find that frequent acts of the 
three theological virtues serve to increase them ; or if they do not im- 
mediately produce this effect, they dispose the soul to growth in vir- 
tue. 

The moral virtues are increased by frequently performing 
good actions, and also by the increase of sanctifying grace. 

Frequent acts will increase the facility in the practice of good, 
while the increase of grace will render the will more disposed towards 
what is good. The more proficiency we attain and the greater the 
measure of sanctifying grace we receive, the greater will be oiu" moral 
virtues. We should endeavor to increase at least in one virtue, for 
the increase of one will be accompanied by the increase of all the 
rest. We can and ought to cultivate more especially that virtue for 
the exercise of which our circumstances afford most opportunity, 
or for which we have a particular admiration. The more we advance 
in our favorite virtue, the greater progress we make in every other 
virtue. 

8. All perfect virtue is lost immediately upon falling into 
mortal sin, for thereby the love of God is lost, without which 
there can be no perfect virtue. 

He who suffers shipwreck (1 Tim. i. 19), loses all that he has; 
and so the man who falls into mortal sin loses all the perfection in 
virtue and all the merits he has acquired. However great the pro- 
ficiency attained in the practice of virtue, the freedom of the will 
is not impaired ; man is always liable to sin. " He that thinketh him- 
self to stand, let him take heed lest he fall" (1 Cor. x. 12). Ke- 
member how David sinned, and St. Peter fell. Virtue is far more 
easily lost than won. How swiftly a stone rolls down hill, and yet 
how slowly it is rolled up ! One single mortal sin suffices to obliterate 
virtue, just as one string out of tune in an instrument spoils the 
melody. Yet suffering is not of itself calculated to destroy virtue. 
Virtue is like a precious pearl, which if it falls into the mud retains 
its pristine beauty unmarred. In fact virtue stands out in stronger 
relief in the season of affliction ; just as the stars shine at night and 
are not seen by day, or spices give out their aroma most freely when 
they are crushed. The outward semblance of virtue often remains 
when one has committed a grievous sin, but it then resembles a corpse, 
for the soul, the life, has departed from it. One may, therefore, be 
extremely pious, and yet corrupt at heart. 

The perfect virtues will be diminished if one desists from the 
practice of good. 



Sin. 449 

He who makes a parade of his virtues is in danger of losing them. 
The man who carries his treasures openly on the highway is sure to 
be robbed of them. As the display of gold or costly apparel invites 
the thief, so the display of virtue attracts the devil, who seeks to take 
it from us. Moreover, sweet-scented things lose their perfume if 
they are exposed to the air. Consequently, if we cannot avoid doing 
good in the sight of man, let our only desire be to please God. Unless 
we are constant and persevering, we shall gradually fall off in virtue. 
Trees that are continually transplanted cannot grow properly, much 
less bear fruit; on the contrary, they are likely to wither and die. 
So continual change of place, of position, of office, is highly preju- 
dicial to progress in virtue. 

in. SIN". 

1. He who wittingly and willingly transgresses one of God's 
commandments is guilty of sin. 

Adam and Eve in paradise transgressed the commandment of 
God; they knew it well, and no one, not even the serpent, compelled 
them to violate it. Thus they committed a sin. The commandments 
of God are principally the Ten Commandments, and the precept to 
do works of mercy, besides all other precepts enjoined upon us in 
God's name. The commandments either enjoin or prohibit some act, 
therefore they are divided into sins of commission and sins of omis- 
sion. As the divine law is for the safeguarding of the majesty of 
God, or for our own welfare or the good of our neighbor, we sin 
in transgressing that law, either against God, our neighbor, or our- 
selves. Sin is nothing else but revolt against and disobedience to 
God (Rom. iv. 15; 1 John iii. 4). The sinner throws off the yoke of 
God, saying: "I will not serve" (Jer. ii. 20). He attacks God, he 
would fain destroy Him, that He might no longer see and punish his 
transgressions. When we commit sin, we take up arms against God, 
we crucify again the Son of God (Heb. vi. 6), by making the Re- 
deemer's blood of no avail. The malice of the sinner pains Our Lord 
more deeply than all the sufferings of His Passion, just as the loss of 
his wages is more grievous to the workingman than all the toil he has 
gone through. How foolish it would be of any one in the world to 
offend an individual on whom his whole future happiness depended; 
how much more foolishly then do we act, when we make Him our 
enemy Whose aid is indispensable to us for all things and at all times, 
and on Whom our eternal salvation depends. If your life was at 
another man's mercy, would you venture to insult that man? Re- 
member your existence depends entirely upon the will of God; it 
hangs as by a thread, at any moment He could cast you back into the 
nothingness whence you came, and yet you do not fear to provoke 
His anger. Miserable mortals that we are, we cannot tolerate the 
slightest indignity offered us by our fellow-men, who are our equals, 
and yet we ourselves show the utmost disrespect to the Lord of 
heaven ! 

It is not counted as a sin if we commit an evil action, of the 
sinfulness of which we are ignorant, through no fault of our 
own, nor if our will does not consent to the evil deed. 



450 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

!N'oe*s intoxication was guiltless, because he was not aware of 
the inebriating qualities of wine. If one eat meat on Friday, forget- 
ting that it is Friday, it is no sin. But it is quite otherwise if it is 
in consequence of a long-continued habit of sin that one fails to see 
the guilt of an action, or if one's ignorance of its sinfulness is due 
to culpable negligence. " It is one thing," says St. Gregory, " not to 
know, another to wish not to know ; for he who closes his eyes that he 
may not see the truth is a despiser of the law." Those who in the 
present day avoid hearing sermons will have no excuse before God. 
We do not commit sin so long as we do not consent to what is evil. 
The early Christians had incense forcibly thrust into their hands, 
and were compelled to cast it upon the altar; were they to blame? 
Evil thoughts are suggested by the devil, but if we do not consent to 
them, we commit no sin, any more than we are responsible for what 
we do in our dreams. We should not allow these thoughts to disquiet 
us, but simply put them out of our minds. But actions done with- 
out our will most certainly are sinful, if we are to blame for the cause 
of those actions. The misdeeds of a drunken man are unquestionably 
sins, if in any way he foresees them as a consequence of his intoxi- 
cation. 

2. Sin is in its essence an unlawful turning towards the crea- 
ture and turning away from God.. 

St. Bonaventure says that turning towards creatures is the source 
of all sin. Earthly creatures are only a means for the attainment of 
everlasting felicity; they are in no wise the final end of man. It is 
with them as with drugs; used in moderation they are beneficial, 
but used immoderately they are injurious and a hindrance in the way 
of our salvation. Therefore God only allows us to use creatures within 
a certain limit, and in fact only in so far as they are necessary or 
helpful to our eternal happiness ; for instance. He permits us to take 
such nourishment as is needful for the support of nature, but forbids 
excess in eating and drinking; He permits us to have possessions of 
our own, but not to take what belongs to our neighbor. He who uses 
creatures to a greater extent, or otherwise than God ordains (doing 
violence to the creature, Rom. viii. 22), wanders away from "God 
and from his final end; he prefers transient joys to eternal Hiss 
(Wisd. ii. 1-9). Thus a child, if a lump of sugar and a piece of gold 
be offered him, chooses the sugar. The sinner forsakes God, the foun- 
tain of living waters, and digs to himself broken cisterns that can 
hold no water (Jer. ii. 13). Sin is a species of idolatry; for the sinner 
worships the creature in the place of the Creator ; his sin is his god. 
By sin man becomes the servant of the creature, he becomes depend- 
ent upon creatures; he is like a fish caught upon a hook, and held 
fast by it. Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of sin (John 
viii. 34). He is worse than a servant, for a servant can run away; 
but the servant of sin cannot escape from sin; he carries it with 
him whithersoever he goes. 

3. Sin is the one only evil upon earth; it robs man of the 
supernatural beauty of the soul, it makes him resemble the 
devil, and brings misery upon him even while he is on earth. 



Sin. ' 451 

Sin is the one only evil in the world. We mortals are accustomed 
to regard the sufferings and contradictions of this life as evils, 
whereas they are graces in reality; since, far from separating us 
from God, they bring us nearer to Him. Through sin man becomes 
worthless in God's sight; through sin, he, who is made of nothing, 
returns to his original nothingness. St. John Chrysostom says: 
"Many consider eternal damnation to be the greatest of all evils; 
but for my part, I always assert that to offend Jesus Christ is a far 
greater evil." Sin is a greater evil than the annihilation of the 
world, nay, of a million worlds, with their countless inhabitants. 
Sin is the only real disgrace. When it was said to St. Francis Xavier, 
the apostle of the Indies, who bore the title of Apostolic Legate, that 
it was a degradation to him to wash his own linen, he replied: 
" Nothing degrades the Christian except sin." Through sin the 
supernatural beauty of the soul is lost. As a white robe is soiled and 
stained if it comes into contact with the mud of the streets, so the 
soul loses her supernatural beauty, which consists in sanctifying 
grace, and contracts a hideous stain, through the inordinate love of 
creatures. On some one observing to St. Francis Chantal, when she 
was nursing a leper, that she might easily take the disease, she an- 
swered : " I fear no leprosy but the leprosy of sin." Sin renders 
man like to the devil. Sinners are imitators and followers of the 
devil (Wisd. ii. 25). They are made one with him by sin. " He that 
committeth sin is of the devil " (1 John iii. 8). They even become his 
children by sin (v. 10). Our Lord said to the Pharisees in the Tem- 
ple : " You are of your father the devil, and the desires of your father 
you will do" (John viii. 44). Sin makes the misery of man even 
while he is on earth. If the heavenly bodies forsook their orbits, they 
would be dashed to pieces ; if the train becomes derailed, a catastrophe 
ensues. So God's rational creatures, the human race, are overtaken 
by disaster if they transgress the law God has laid down for them. 
The sinner rebels against the rules of his own reason, the rules of 
society, the rules that govern the universe; for this he has to endure 
the reproaches of conscience, the penalties of the law, and the chastise- 
ments of God. 

THE DEVELOPMENT OF SIN. 

A house does not fall all at once ; at first a few drops of rain that 
are scarcely noticed soak into the walls, soften the mortar and 
loosen the stones; presently the whole building collapses. The devil 
sets to work in a similar way to destroy the soul. We learn from 
Eve's example how sin begins. 

Sin arises generally in the following manner: 
1. First of all an evil thought comes into the mind, which 
in itself is not sinful. (Temptation.) 

Within the heart there are two masters, whose characters are dia- 
metrically opposed ; what one praises, the other blames. One of these 
is concupiscence, the other conscience. Hence when an evil thought 
comes into the mind, a struggle immediately arises: conscience ad- 
monishes and holds us back, concupiscence incites and urges us to 
evil. We can no more prevent bad thoughts from coming into the 



453 Good Works ^ Virtue, Sin, Vice,~ 

mind, than an island in mid-ocean can prevent the waves from dash- 
ing on its shores; but as the island resists the force of the breakers, 
so we can withstand the assaults of temptation. We must instantly 
turn our thoughts elsewhere ; by means of prayer, or the remembrance 
of death or of judgment. "In all things remember thy last end, 
and thou shalt never sin" (Ecclus. vii. 40). Or we may recall to 
mind the terrible consequences of sin. What is of the greatest impor- 
tance is to turn one's thoughts at once; a fire just lighted is easily 
extinguished, a disease may be arrested in its first stage. Slay your 
enemy while he is young and feeble. Stifle evil thoughts at their 
birth; banish them the moment they present themselves. 

2. If evil thoughts are not instantly expelled, they awaken 
in the mind complacency in what is evil, and that is already a 
venial sin. 

Complacency or satisfaction in what is evil, may also be a mortal 
sin if we willingly take pleasure in something which is forbidden 
under pain of mortal sin. The evil thoughts which the devil puts 
into our mind may be compared to eggs; as after a period of incu- 
bation the young bird is produced from the egg, so sin is produced 
from evil thoughts if they are cherished in the breast and regarded 
with complacency. " When concupiscence hath conceived, it bringeth 
forth sin" (Jas. i. 15). "Evil thoughts are an abomination to the 
Lord" (Prov. xv. 26). Forget not that God is omniscient; He sees 
all your thoughts. He knows them better than you do yourself, and 
at the judgment they will every one be disclosed. 

3. The evil desire next arises; this has a turpitude corre- 
sponding to that of the sinful action towards which it is directed. 

An evil desire is an act of the will, or deliberate consent. That 
which proceeds from the heart (i.e., the will), that is sin (Matt. xv. 
19). Before God the will to sin counts as the deed of sin. He who 
entertains an evil desire has committed the sin already in his heart 
(Matt. V. 28). He who has consented to a mortal sin is like a stag, 
fatally wounded by the huntsman, which, if it escapes capture, cannot 
escape death. Evil desires may be compared to the little worms 
which perforate the keel of a vessel and render it unseaworthy, if 
they do not cause it to sink. So evil desires arrest the course of the 
good and pious on their voyage to the celestial haven, or even cause 
them to sinl^ into the nethermost abyss. Many evil desires are mortal 
sins (Council of Trent, 14, c. 5). He who knows not how to tame 
his evil lusts, is like a rider whose horse takes fright and bolts, drag- 
ging him through bogs and morasses, for he will be drawn into mortal 
sin and finally cast into hell. How unhappy are you, if you cherish 
sinful desires in your heart ! 

4. Finally comes the resolution to commit the sin. 

The evil concupiscence was merely a wish or longing for the 
sinful object. The resolution is a final decision to adopt the means 
necessary to the attainment of that object. Up to this point the 
sin is still an interior sin. 

5. If occasion then presents itself for the sin, the exterior 
act is committed. 



Sin, 453 

An exterior sin is attended by worse consequences than an in- 
terior sin; it augments the malice of the will, destroys the sense of 
shame, often gives scandal, brings misery on the sinner, and is more 
severely punished by God. A king has intrusted the defence of a 
fortress to his general. A messenger is sent in disguise to this gen- 
eral, bearing a letter, in which a large sum of money is offered 
him if he will surrender the fortress. Three courses of action are 
open to the general; either he will reject the offer and have the 
messenger hanged for a spy; or he may enter into negotiations with 
him at first, and presently break them off ; or he may open the gates 
to the enemy. Our soul is that fortress ; we are its commandant and 
our adversary is the devil. He sends out envoys seeking by all man- 
ner of promises and representations to estrange us from God. If we 
indignantly reject his advances, our loyalty to God is thereby con- 
firmed; if we take pleasure in his suggestions, we begin to fail in 
fidelity to God and deserve punishment; but if we commit the sin, 
we surrender our soul to the devil, who enters in with all his satel- 
lites. After mortal sin, the soul is in a state of sin. When water is 
once frozen, it remains a block of ice, until it is melted by heat. 
Thus it is with the man who falls into mortal sin; he continues in a 
state of sin until he is brought to repentance. Hence we say: That 
man lives in sin, or, he died in his sins, etc. 

6. Bv the repetition of exterior sins the habit of sin, or vice, 
is contracted. 

If mortal sin be repeated many times the habit of sin is formed; 
that is to say the sinner acquires a certain proficiency in wickedness, 
and the will is permanently inclined to evil. The Fathers point to 
the three instances in which Christ raised the dead as exemplifying 
mortal sin in its three stages : interior sin, exterior sin, and the habit 
of vice. Whoso only sins in his heart, is like the daughter of Jairus, 
who lay dead within the house ; he who commits sin outwardly, is like 
the young man at Naim, who was carried out of the city gates; 
while he who is given up to vice is like Lazarus, who had lain several 
days in the grave. In the first two instances Our Lord merely bade 
the dead arise, in the last He was troubled in spirit. He wept. He 
caused the stone to be removed and called loudly into the interior 
of the sepulchre. This He did to signify the great difficulty of re- 
awakening one who is sunk in vice to the life of the Spirit. 

7. Every outward sin and every vice brings, as its own 
punishment, other sins and vices of a different nature in its 
train. 

The grace of God departs from every man who has fallen into 
mortal sin. !N"ot so temptation. In fact the evil enemy bestirs him- 
self the more to bind his captive more tightly. Now since temptation 
cannot be overcome without God's grace, the sinner falls lower and 
lower, from one sin to another. The sins which follow upon a sin 
may therefore be called the chastisement of sin. Holy Scripture 
expresses the withdrawal of grace in words such as these: "God 
blinded the eyes, or hardened the heart of the sinner" (e.g., Pharao). 
" God delivered him up to a reprobate sense " (Rom. i. 28). 



454 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

8. If any vice is firmly rooted in the soul, it oftentimes 
brings after it sins of the worst type, and those that are said to 
cry to Heaven for vengeance; finally it produces complete ob- 
duracy in the sinner. 

He who has for a lengthened period been given over to a life of 
sin, does not shrink from the greatest excesses. And just as perfec- 
tion in virtue procures for mortal man upon earth happiness which 
is almost that of heaven, and exalts him to union with God, so there 
are different grades in vice, by which the soul descends to the condi- 
tion of the reprobate and her complete separation from God is con- 
summated. Finally he who is the slave of vice is often inspired by 
a bitter hatred against God, and wilfully and of set purpose resists 
the influence and action of the Holy Spirit ; end at last by final im- 
penitence commits the sin against the Holy Ghost which cannot be 
forgiven. 

TEE KINDS OF SIN. 

There are different kinds of sin. 

Circumstances which alter the nature of a sin must be specified in 

confession (Council of Trent, 14, 5). 

All those sins which violate different commandments, or 
which are opposed to different virtues, are distinct in their nature 
one from the other; as also are those sins by which one and the 
same commandment is transgressed, or which are opposed to 
one and the same virtue, in different ways. 

For instance, theft and lying are two different kinds of sins, be- 
cause by theft the Seventh, by lying the Eighth Commandment, is 
broken. Pride and avarice are sins of a different kind, because they 
are opposed to two different virtues, humility and liberality. Theft 
and cheating are two sins of a different nature because they violate 
the Seventh Commandment in two several ways. Presumption of 
God's mercy and despair are two sins of a different nature, because 
they are opposed to the virtue of hope in two different ways. 

1. Sins are generally divided into sins of word, of thought, 
and of deed. 

Hatred and murder are two different kinds of sin, because the 
Fifth Commandment is transgressed by them in two different ways, 
by thought and by deed.. Boasting in speech and ostentation in dress 
are two different kinds of sin, because they offend against the virtue 
of humility in two different ways, by word and by deed. 

2. A distinction also exists between our own sins, and the sins 
in which we co-operate. 

Our own sins are those which we ourselves commit. 

The sins in which we co-operate are those which we do not 
indeed commit ourselves, but for which we are to blame. We 
may be accessory to another's sin by command, counsel, consent, 



Sin, 455 

praise, assistance, defence; by provocation or by silence, or by 
abstaining from punishing the ill done, although we might and 
ought to have prevented it. 

The sinner is like a man with the leprosy; he leads others into sin 
as the leper infects others with his loathsome disease. In that case 
the guilt of their sin lies at his door. If a man sets fire to a house, 
he is to blame for the conflagration; if he gives his neighbor poison, 
he is answerable for his neighbor's death. The same is true of us 
if we lead any one into sin, or even if we do not endeavor to prevent 
the sin. To leave a crime unpunished is to teach others to commit 
it. If the bodyguard of an emperor were to hear that an attempt had 
been made on the person of their imperial master, they would be 
sorely alarmed, for they would know that to allege that they had 
no part in it would be of no avail as an excuse; in like manner we 
shall have good cause for apprehension, if through our cowardice or 
negligence an affront has been offered to the divine majesty. He who 
might prevent an evil deed and does not do so, is to blame for that 
deed. In illustration of this remember how Herod commanded the 
murder of the holy innocents. Aaron consented to the Israelites' 
demand and made the golden calf. The Jews were pleased because 
Herod had put the Apostle James to death ; this induced him to appre- 
hend St. Peter, with the intention of executing him also (Acts xii.). 
Saul assisted the men who stoned Stephen, by taking care of their 
garments. Job's wife provoked her husband to anger and impa- 
tience; Tobias' wife did the same. Heli, the high priest, did not re- 
buke his sons for their misdeeds nor correct them ; for this God repri- 
manded him by Samuel's mouth (1 Kings iii.). Those, too, who, 
being members of a council, through human respect do not protest 
against the passing of unjust decrees, are guilty of sin; the prophet 
compares such persons to dumb dogs, not able to bark (Is. Ivi. 10). 

Earthly potentates, legislative bodies, parents and superiors, 
employers of labor, editors of periodicals, and publishers, may 
easily render themselves guilty of the sin of others. 

If the ruler of a nation enters upon an unjust war, is he not 
answerable for all the crimes which are perpetrated in that war? 
Who is to blame when laws are passed antagonistic to religion, where- 
by the salvation of many is imperilled? Who is to blame when the 
daily papers are the means of stirring up national and religious ani- 
mosities and rousing the spirit of persecution ? Whose in such cases 
is the greater sin? 

He who is to blame for another man's sin deserves punish- 
oaent quite as much as if he had committed the sin himself. 

He who tempts another to sin is perhaps the more blameworthy 
of the two. Remember that God punished Eve more severely than 
Adam, because she led him into sin. Even to this day the conse- 
quences of original sin weigh more heavily upon the wealcer than 
upon the sterner sex. To tempt others to sin is also a sin against 
charity. It is like the devil who, not content with being evil him- 
self, seeks to make others evil. For this reason Our Lord exclaims; 



456 Good Works f Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

** Woe to that man by whom the scandal cometh. It were better for 
him that a millstone should be hanged about his neck, and that he 
should be drowned in the depth of the sea " (Matt, xviii. 6). 



THE COMPARATIVE MAGNITUDE OF SIN. 

1. All sins are not equally great. 

Our Lord compares some sins to camels, others to gnats (Matt, 
xxiii. 24) ; or again He compares some to motes, others to beams 
(Matt. vii. 3) ; He contrasts the depth of ten thousand talents with 
that of a hundred pence (Matt, xviii. 23 seq.). He said to Pilate: 
" He that hath delivered Me to thee hath the greater sin " (John. xix. 
11). 

1. A sin is all the greater the more imf)ortant is the object 
it injures, the clearer the knowledge of the sinfulness of the 
deed, and the greater the liberty of action enjoyed by the doer. 

In the first place, much depends on the value and importance of 
the object against which the evil act is directed. If God is thereby 
offended, it is much more sinful than if the offence were against one 
of our fellow-men. Or if it be directed against a man's life, it is 
worse than if his property alone was attacked. A great deal depends 
also on the knowledge possessed of the sinfulness of the action. 
Sin is much greater in a Christian than in a heathen. If a priest 
commits a sin, it is worse for him than for an ordinary man, 
little versed perhaps in religious matters, because the priest has a 
closer knowledge of the will of God. Our Lord says : " The servant 
who knew the will of his lord and did not according to his will, shall 
be beaten with many stripes; but he that knew not, and did things 
worthy of stripes, shall be beaten with few stripes " (Luke xii. 47, 48). 
The greater your knowledge, the more rigorously will you be judged, 
if your life is not holy in proportion to your knowledge. The more 
abundant the graces bestowed on you, the more heinous your trans- 
gression. Finally much depends upon whether a man has or has not 
been a perfectly free agent. Any one who was intimidated, or who 
was exposed to fierce temptation, is far less culpable than one who 
was free to act as he pleased. St. Peter's denial was consequently 
a lesser sin than Judas' betrayal of Our Lord. 

2. Circumstances of person, cause, time, place, means, ob 
ject, or the evil consequences of a sin may enhance its guilt. 

For instance : it is worse for a monarch to sin openly than for one 
of his subjects ; offences committed in the presence of several persons 
are graver than if they were done in secret ; to work hard all day long 
on Sunday is more sinful than to work for one hour only. Robbery 
with violence is a greater sin than surreptitious purloining; to take 
from a poor man is a greater sin than to steal from a rich man. It 
is far more wrong to steal in church than out of it. 

2. Many sins are so great that they separate us entirely from 
God, and deprive us of His friendship ; they are called mortal or 
deadly sins. Sins of lesser moment are called venial sins. 



Sin. 457 

Some diseases only weaken the bodily strength, others destroy life. 
It is the same with sin; some sins only impede the soul in her efforts 
to attain her final end, others again extinguish within her sanctifying 
grace, the life of the soul. In our intercourse with our friends, it 
often happens that some difference arises ; if the offence is but slight, 
it does not seriously affect our friendship; if it is grave, it puts an 
end to the friendship. Holy Scripture speaks of some sins whereby 
the grace of God is completely lost (as David's sin), and of others into 
which the just man may fall seven times, that is frequently (Prov. 
xxiv. 16), without ceasing to be a just man (Council of Trent, 6, 11). 
Again, it speaks of sins which exclude from heaven, by which eternal 
punishment is incurred, and of others which have not these fatal con- 
sequences. St. Paul reckons among mortal sins, idolatry, murder, 
covetousness, drunkenness, etc. (1 Cor. vi. 9; Gal. v. 19.) In the 
present day there is no sin so grievous but it finds some ready to 
palliate and excuse it. Beware lest you be led astray by the false 
maxims of the world ; hold fast by the word of God, the teaching of 
the Church. God, not the world, will one day be your judge. Mortal 
sin is so called because it causes the death of the soul; the soul does 
not, it is true, cease to exist, but it loses the presence of the Holy 
Ghost. As the body dies when the soul departs from it, so the soul 
dies when God departs from it. Thus mortal sin may to a certain ex- 
tent be said to be spiritual suicide. Venial sin is so called, because it 
is easily forgiven. Yet venial sin must not be underrated. It cannot 
withdraw us from the way which leads to God, but it can arrest our 
progress in that way. Venial sin is, moreover, an offence against the 
infinite majesty of God. St. Jerome says no offence against Our Lord 
God, however slight, is to be thought of little moment. The destruc- 
tion of the heavens and the earth would be a lesser calamity than one 
venial sin. Many theologians assert that the blood of all the martyrs 
and all their merits would not suffice to make satisfaction to the 
divine majesty for one venial sin; only the precious blood of Christ 
can do this. 

Mortal and venial sin differ essentially from each other. 

Mortal sin is like a severe wound, from which a man rarely re- 
covers, whereas venial sin is a slight wound, which at the most makes 
him ill. By mortal sin the axe is laid to the root of the tree ; by venial 
sin a cut is made in the bark, which may perhaps prove prejudicial to 
its growth. 

It is an exceedingly dififtcult and dangerous matter to decide 
whether a sin is mortal or venial. Only one thing is certain: 

Mortal sin is not possible unless God is no longer the final 
end towards which our intention is directed. 

It is difficult and dangerous to decide what is mortal and what is 
venial sin. It is often impossible to determine about any act whether 
it is a mortal or a venial sin. " Let no one presume," says St. Al- 
phonsus, " to assert any sin to be mortal, unless he is quite certain of 
it; otherwise he may lead men to despair, and even cast them into 
hell; instead of raising them out of the mire of sin, he will plunge 
them the deeper into it." No man can be guilty of mortal sin, unless 



4:58 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

God has ceased to be the centre towards which all his affections con- 
verge. Mortal sin is a turning away of our whole being from God, 
and a turning to creatures as our ultimate end. 

3. He commits a mortal sin who consciously and of his own 
free will does grievous dishonor to God or wrong to his neighbor 
in a weighty matter; who does injury to his own life, or to the 
life, the property, or the reputation of his neighbor. 

Idolatry, heresy, blasphemy, perjury, serious desecration of Sun- 
days and holydays, come under the category of mortal sins, because 
they are a direct affront to the majesty of God. To injure one's 
health slightly through thoughtlessness is a venial sin; suicide is a 
mortal sin. A man who beats his neighbor commits a venial sin, 
but if he injures his body to any great extent, it is a mortal sin. To 
steal a halfpenny is a venial sin, to defraud one's neighbor of a 
large sum of money is a mortal sin. To disclose the faults of another 
without necessity is a venial sin, but to lodge a false accusation 
against h]m is a mortal sin, because in that case the wrong done him 
is in an important matter. We cannot commit a mortal sin, unless 
we are conscious of the sinfulness of the act. Thus children who 
have no conception of the abominable nature of some act which as a 
rule is a mortal sin, cannot be guilty of grievous sin. It is also requi- 
site that a man should act of his own free will. One who perhaps 
does a very sinful deed under the mastery of intense fear, having been 
intimidated by threats, can scarcely be said to have committed mortal 
sin. A man may also be so distracted in consequence of illness that 
he scarcely knows what he does. Beware then how you pass judgment 
upon your neighbor's misdeeds ; you are not omniscient ! 

4. He commits a venial sin who only injures something of 
trifling consequence; or who, though he injures something of 
great importance, injures it very slightly, or does so almost uncon- 
sciously and to some extent unwittingly. 

Yet that which is ordinarily only a venial sin, may become 
a mortal sin; if, that is to say, great scandal is given thereby, 
or great harm done, or if the venial sin is committed out of 
contempt for the law. 

Attacks upon religion or upon a man's good name in the public 
journals can scarcely be reckoned as venial sins, as they give rise to 
great scandal and occasion no small mischief. If a man were to do 
wrong and say boastingly, I do it precisely because it is forbidden, 
he is guilty of grievous sin. 

Venial sins if repeated may become mortal, if they are the 
means of doing great harm. 

He who steals a trifling sum time after time from the same per- 
son does very wrong, if the small sums mount up to a considerable 
figure. As water that gradually filters through a tiny leak in the 
vessel finally causes it to sink, so venial sins affect the destruction of 
the soul. Many fibres of hemp twisted together form a strong rope 



Sin. 459 

fit to hold back a mighty ship; so a mimber of venial sins form a 
cord that keeps the soul back from journeying towards heaven. 

5. All mortal sins are not of equal magnitude, nor are all 
venial sins of the same importance. The most heinous sins are 
the sins against the Holy Ghost, and those that cry to heaven for 
vengeance. 

6. He commits a sin against the Holy Ghost who persistently 
and wilfully resists the action of the Holy Ghost. 

It often occurs in the course of one's life, that the Holy Spirit in- 
cites us to prayer or other good works, and by reason of distractions 
or the cares of this world we do not obey His voice. This is not, 
however, the sin against the Holy Ghost. That sin is only com- 
mitted when a man persistently and wilfully withstands the inspira- 
tions of the Holy Ghost and dies in an attitude of resistance to Him. 
The Pharisees and Scribes were perfectly aware that Christ was the 
llessias; they were convinced of it by the miracles He worked, by 
the excellence of His doctrine, by the sanctity of Plis life, by the 
fulfilment of the prophecies, by His own utterances, but their arro- 
gant pride did not allow them to recognize Him, for then they would 
have been obliged to alter their lives. Although they knew better, 
they declared Him to be possessed of the devil (John viii. 48), His 
works to be the work of the devil (Matt. xii. 24), and persecuted Him 
as much as was within their power. Thus they resisted the known 
truth. King Pharao knew the exit of the Israelites from Egypt to 
be the will of the true God, from the intrepid conduct of Moses and 
the wonders he wrought; yet in spite of Moses' admonitions he ad- 
hered to his own will. He hardened his heart against salutary ex- 
hortations. Freemasons will not allow a priest to approach them 
when they are on their death-bed. " They stop their ears, not to hear, 
and make their heart as the adamant stone" (Zach. vii. 11). They 
persist of set purpose in impenitence. The Holy Ghost acts like a 
man who finds his enemy asleep in the snow, and wakes him, lest he 
should die of cold. But the sleeper, far from being grateful for this 
act of kindness, thrusts away his benefactor, and settles himself 
again to sleep. Thus he who sins against the Holy Ghost, refuses to 
be aroused from his spiritual torpor by the influence of grace. He 
may also be likened to a sick man, who not only will not have his 
wounds healed, but accelerates his own death. 

The sin against the Holy Ghost is for the most part the re- 
sult of a wicked course of life. 

It belongs essentially to mortal sin to darken the understanding, 
and alienate the will from God. The more sins a man commits, 
the more his understanding is darkened, and the more his will, 
already estranged from God, is hardened, until at length he finds 
himself in a deplorable state of blindness and impenitence. The soul 
is like a room of which the shutters are closed ; sin prevents the light 
of the Holy Spirit from penetrating into it. Holy Scripture says of 
Pharao that God hardened his heart (Exod. ix. 12). That is, He al- 
lowed bis heart to become obdurate, as the penalty of his pins. Like 
ill weeds, which not merely continue what they are in spite of fair 
weather and fertilizing rains, but grow all the more rank on account 



460 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

of these favorable conditions, the wicked only become worse under 
the gracious influences of the Holy Spirit. A pillar that is straight 
stands all the firmer if a weight be placed upon it, but if once it 
leaves the perpendicular, pressure upon it will cause it to fall. So 
if the heart is upright, the teaching of wisdom confirms it in in- 
tegrity, but the depraved heart only sinks lower in vice. A neglected 
education, bad books, or pride, are often the cause of the heart being 
closed against the action of the Holy Spirit. The heathen persecute 
missionaries and put them to death, because they are so blinded 
by idolatry that they will not renounce their foolish ideas. Anti- 
Christian periodicals are the means of prejudicing many of their 
readers against the doctrine and practice of holy Church. Pride 
caused the so-called Old Catholics to refuse to accept the dogma of 
Papal Infallibility when it was defined by the Vatican Council in 
1870. 

Whosoever has committed the sin against the Holy Ghost 
cannot obtain forgiveness of sin from God, and for this reason: 
Because he thrusts from him the grace of conversion. 

Our Lord says : " The blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not 
be forgiven, neither in this world or in the world to come" (Matt. 
xii. 32). The sick man cannot be cured of his malady if he refuses to 
take the remedy which is known to be unfailing; nor can the soul 
recover from its sickness if it reject grace, the infallible means of 
cure. Final impenitence is the only offence which God will not par- 
don; it is a greater insult to Him than sin itself. 

Those who sin against the Holy Ghost often come to a miser- 
able end here, and are consigned to eternal damnation hereafter. 

The sin against the Holy Ghost is not a sin of frailty, it is a sin 
of diabolical malice, and therefore it is deserving of more severe pun- 
ishment. King Pharao, with all his army, was drowned in the Bed 
Sea (Exod. xiv.) ; the Jews, who rejected and even killed the prophets 
(Matt, xxiii. 37), had to expiate their impenitence bitterly in the 
year 70, on the destruction of Jerusalem by the Eomans, when there 
came upon them the tribulation Our Lord predicted, " such as had 
not been from the beginning of the world, neither shall be " (Matt, 
xxiv. 21). A clever physician continues to prescribe for his patient 
although his medicines produce no immediate improvement, trying to 
save him by every expedient his skill can devise; but if the patient 
cannot be induced to swallow the drugs, and even goes so far as to 
throw them out of the window, the physician discontinues his visits. 
God acts in a similar manner towards the sinner who resists actual 
grace; He forsakes him entirely. To him may be applied the words 
the prophet Samuel addressed to King Saul : " Because thou hast 
rejected the word of the Lord, the Lord hath rejected thee " (1 Kings 
XV. 26). He who has committed the sin against the Holy Ghost 
cannot be saved, because at the hour of death he is without the in- 
dwelling of the Holy Spirit and sanctifying grace. His spiritual con- 
dition is that of the reprobate. 

7. Sins that cry to heaven for vengeance are sins of great 



Sin, 461 

malice. They are : wilful murder, oppression of the poor, defraud« 
ing laborers of their wages, and the sin of Sodom. 

These sins are of so abominable a nature, that every man's feeL 
ings must revolt against them. When Cain killed his brother Abel, 
God said to him : " The voice of thy brother's blood crieth to Me 
from the earth " (Gen. iv. 10). Every nation on the face of the earth 
punishes murder with exceptional severity, generally by the execution 
of the criminal. The oppression of the helpless Israelites in Egypt 
was a sin that cried to heaven (Exod. iii. 7). The Pharisees were 
guilty of this sin; they oppressed the poor and prayed long prayers 
(Matt, xxiii. 14). God expressly forbade the Jews to injure the 
widow and orphan (Exod. xxii. 22; Ecclus. xxxiv. 26). To keep 
, back the wages of the needy (Deut. xxiv. 14), is a sin that cries to 
heaven, also on some pretext or other to defraud them of the whole 
amount (Jas. v. 4). In the Middle Ages an action brought by a 
working man took precedence of all others in the law courts, and judg- 
ment was given within three days. The sin of Sodom takes its name 
from the inliabitants of Sodom, who were guilty of unnatural sins, 
by reason of which they were destroyed by God, Who rained down 
upon them brimstone and fire (Gen. xix. 24). The Dead Sea is still 
a mournful memorial of their sin; one so shameful that it must not 
be named among us. 

In the present day sins that cry to heaven are sometimes 
committed by employers, in their conduct towards their defence- 
less workpeople. 

Many employers make their people work in unhealthy and over- 
crowded rooms, unheated in winter time; they do not allow them a 
proper interval for rest and for their meals; they do not pay them 
enough to enable them to live decently; they require of them more 
work than they can do, and of a kind which they have no right to de- 
mand of them. The exploitation and oppression of the laborer has 
in our day given rise to the abuses of social democracy. 

8. A distinction must be made between venial sins and imper- 
fections. Imperfections are faults which are due not to a bad will, 
but to human frailty. 

Uncivil manners, lies told in joke, involuntary distractions in 
prayer, etc., are imperfections. " Venial sins," says St. Francis of 
Sales, " arise from a bad will, imperfections do not." But, although 
imperfections are not actually sins, yet they are wrong and ought to 
be avoided. 

THE CONSEQUENCES OF SIN. 

Mortal sin makes a man supremely unhappy. Many are the 
scourges of the sinner (Ps. xxxi. 10). God calls to the sinner, say- 
ing : " Know thou and see that it is an evil and bitter thing for thee 
to have left the Lord thy God" (Jer. ii. 19). A man who has for- 
saken God meets with a similar fate to the man who went from Jeru- 
salem — the dwelling-place of the living God — down through rough 



462 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

•ways to Jericho. The punishment of sin follows immediately upon 
it, although the Day of Judgment is not yet come. 

1. Mortal sin deprives a man of sanctifying grace, and delivers 
him into the power of the devil. 

The Holy Ghost departs immediately from one who has committed 
a mortal sin. As the dove will not remain in unclean places, so the 
Holy Ghost will not remain in a heart that is defiled by mortal sin. 
The ungodly say to God: "Depart from us" (Job xxii. 17). Mortal 
sin is a thief, for if it gains access to the soul, it robs it of grace, its 
most precious treasure. It is the death of the soul; a man killeth in- 
deed through malice (Wisd. xvi. 14). Sin when it is completed, be- 
getteth death (Jas. i. 15). Thus there are men who live and yet are 
dead. " Sinners," says St. John Chrysostom, " are dead while they 
live, and the just live after they are dead." " Thou dost weep," says 
St. Augustine, " over a body from which the soul has departed, but 
not over a soul from which God has withdrawn Himself." When God 
abandons the soul, the devil enters into it. By mortal sin the temple 
of the Holy Ghost is transformed into a den of robbers, the sister of 
the angels into the companion of fallen spirits. As a ship that has 
lost her rudder is driven about at the mercy of the current, so the 
soul that has lost divine grace is driven by Satan into perdition. 
Sin gives the devil power over the soul, for through sin man places 
himself under servitude to obey the devil (Rom. vi. 16). As every 
one thinks he may treat a widow as he chooses, as she has no one to 
protect her, so the demons do not hesitate to set upon the sinner; 
they cry : " God hath forsaken him ; pursue him and take him, for 
there is none to deliver him" (Ps. Ixx. 11). The loss of sanctifying 
grace entails upon the sinner the following terrible consequences: 
(1) He loses the supernatural beauty of the soul and becomes un- 
clean before God; (2) He loses charity towards God and towards 
his neighbor; (3) His understanding is completely darkened, and his 
will immensely weakened; (4) He loses the merit of all the good 
works he had previously performed, and none of those which he does 
in a state of mortal sin gain for him a reward hereafter; (5) Finally, 
he is liable to fall into other mortal sins. 

Through mortal sin we lose the supernatural beauty of the 
soul and become unclean before God. 

Mortal sin is to the soul what decay is to an apple; the rotten- 
ness destroys the color, the scent, the flavor of the fruit, all, in short, 
that gives it worth and beauty ; so sin robs the soul of all that makes 
it fair and precious. It would be a sore blow to a bride if she were 
to be so much disfigured by a severe illness as to become an object of 
repulsion to her betrothed; it is much the same with the soul that is 
guilty of mortal sin ; she is thereby so much disfigured that Christ, 
her Spouse, regards her with aversion. Through mortal sin charity 
to God and to one's neighbor is lost. When the earth travels away 
from the sun, winter sets in; so the heart of man becomes cold when 
it is estranged from God by mortal sin; the flame of charity is then 
extinguished. The understanding is completely darkened by mortal 
sin. As heavy clouds hide the light of the sun from our sight and 
involve us in darkness, so mortal sin obscures the eye of reason, and 



Sin. 463 

renders us incapable of perceiving the brightness of the Sun of 
justice. A man who has fallen into mortal sin perceiveth not, as the 
Apostle says, the things that are of the Spirit of God (1 Cor. ii. 14). 
As a mirror covered with mildew no longer reflects the objects pre- 
sented to it, so the soul which is sunk in sin can no longer receive 
the impressions of divine grace. The sinner is blinded, and fails as 
fully to see the misery and danger of his condition as one who 
wanders in the darkness of night beside a quarry; were the sinner 
in a state of grace, and enlightened by the Holy Spirit, he would be 
no less startled and alarmed at his spiritual condition than the 
traveller would be on perceiving in the daylight what a perilous 
path he had trodden. By reason of this blindness sinners are often 
gay and light-hearted in spite of their deplorable state. As the 
maniac laughs frantically while he tears his own flesh, so our erring 
brethren make merry while in their madness they inflict serious in- 
jury on their soul. A living body feels the prick of a needle; not so 
a corpse. Thus it is with the soul: As long as it preserves its life, 
it is sensitive to the least sin; but if it be dead, it experiences no 
stings of conscience, even if it be guilty of grievous crimes. 
Through mortal sin the will is immensely weakened. When the cold 
is extreme one's limbs are benumbed and paralyzed; so by mortal 
sin man loses the power to do what is good. He is held captive by 
mortal sin, as a bird is by bird-lime. Through mortal sin we lose the 
merit of all the good works we have previously performed. God 
says by the mouth of His prophet : " If the just man turn himself 
from his justice and do iniquity, all his justices which he hath done 
shall not be remembered" (Ezech. xviii. 24). The just man who 
falls into mortal sin, may be compared to a merchant who has accu- 
mulated great treasures, and whose vessel founders just as he enters 
the harbor. Mortal sin sweeps away at one stroke all our good works 
and our merits, as a sharp frost cuts off all the fair flowers in one 
night, or as a hailstorm ruins the crops of a whole year. He who falls 
into mortal sin earns no reward in heaven for the good works he per- 
forms while in a state of sin. As a branch cut off from the vine 
withers away and bears no fruit, so a man who has lost sanctifying 
grace can do no works that are meritorious. The apostles labored 
all night and took nothing; so the sinner during the night of sin 
cannot, in spite of his utmost exertions, gain any merit for heaven. 
The soul of a sinner is like a desert where nothing grows, but which 
is the haunt of reptiles and beasts of prey. How desolate is that 
spot where God is not ! how parched without the dew of heaven, how 
sterile without the vivifying Sun of grace ! One mortal sin makes it 
easy to commit others. When the soul has left the body, decomposi- 
tion begins; and spiritual decay soon sets in when the Holy Spirit 
has departed from the soul. A grievous sin which has not been 
effaced by penance is the precursor of many others, which follow it 
as its punishment. " The man," says St. Augustine, " who persists in 
his iniquity, adds sin to sin." 

2. Mortal sin brings down upon the sinner both eternal 
damnation and temporal chastisement. 

By mortal sin we incur eternal damnation. As one throws away 
an apple that is rotten throughout, so God repudiates the soul that 



464 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

is stained with mortal sin. He who has fallen into mortal sin has 
lost the wedding garment, i.e., sanctifying grace; he will be cast 
into the exterior darkness (Matt. xxii. 13). Mortal sin is an act of 
high treason against the King of kings. This crime of high treason 
is punished on earth by a long term of imprisonment; as the majesty 
of God infinitely exceeds that of any earthly monarch, the punishment 
of mortal sin is of eternal duration. The man who commits mortal 
sin is as foolish as Esau, who for one mess, sold his first birthright 
(Heb. xii. 16), since for the sake of a momentary gratification he re- 
linquishes his title to the kingdom of heaven. Blessed Thomas More, 
when sentenced to death, would not be persuaded to acknowledge 
the royal supremacy, for he said : " How foolish should I be, were I 
to barter everlasting honor and felicity for the transient happiness 
of a few fleeting years." Mortal sin brings temporal chastisements 
upon the sinner. God sends earthly punishments to restore the spir- 
itual health of the sinner. The temporal penalty most certain to 
follow upon mortal sin is interior disquietude. Mortal sin destroys 
the serenity, the cheerfulness of the soul, as a high wind disturbs and 
ruffles the smooth surface of a lake. " The wicked are like the 
raging sea, that cannot rest" (Is. Ivii. 20). Apprehension and terror 
follow mortal sin like its shadow. He who lives in mortal sin, car- 
ries hell about with him (St. John Chrysostom). Remember the fate 
of the fratricide Cain (Gen. iv. 14). The sinner's evil conscience 
daily calls to him: "Where is thy God?" (Ps. xli. 4.) What peace 
can the sinner enjoy when he knows that an almighty arm is uplifted 
against him? A flash of lightning, a peal of thunder, affects the sin- 
ner as much as the devout prayers of the faithful ; in every sound he 
thinks to hear his sentence of condemnation. God has ordained that 
inordinate passions should be their own punishment. Spiritual con- 
eolations and sensual gratifications can no more co-exist than fire can 
mingle with water. Those who delight in worldly vanities are not 
capable of tasting spiritual joys. Mortal sin, moreover, brings tem- 
poral misfortunes on the sinner. Of this our first parents afford a 
striking example. They were driven out of paradise, condemned to 
labor in the sweat of their face, and made subject to death, because 
of their sin. The most ordinary consequence of sin is sickness; 
hence Our Lord said to the man whom He had cured : " Sin no 
more, lest some worse thing happen unto thee" (John v. 14). 
Want is sometimes the punishment of sin; witness the prodigal son 
(Luke XV.). The loss of property and of reputation are also conse- 
quences of sin, as is the case with thieves and drunkards. The guar- 
dian angels cease to protect those who give themselves up to sin. St. 
Basil says that as smoke drives away bees, so sin causes our good 
angel to depart. If a slave betrays his master, not his master alone, 
but all the members of his master's household are enraged with him. 
As David's servants were angry with Semei, who threw stones at the 
king, so the holy angels are displeased with the sinner who offends 
God. How great is man's folly! He is afraid of eating anything 
deadly, but he does not fear deadly sin, which causes the death of 
the soul. 



Sin. 465 



THE CONSEQUENCES OF VENIAL SIN. 

Venial sin is a slight thing in itself, but it deprives us of much 
that is good; just as a hair, if it gets into the pen, spoils the best 
handwriting. 

1. Venial sin gradually leads to mortal sin, and eventuates 
in the loss of sanctifying grace. 

Venial sin makes mortal sin easy. As a spot of decay in an apple 
gradually spreads until the whole fruit is rotten, so the man who 
does not heed venial sins will soon fall into mortal sin. As sick- 
ness precedes death, so venial sins precede mortal. He who begins 
by neglecting trifling faults, will end by committing grievous sins. 
Venial sins may be compared to the dust which settles on our clothes, 
and if it be not brushed off will spoil them in the end ; it is the moth 
that frets away the garment of sanctifying grace. God permits 
those who make light of venial sin to fall into mortal sin as the 
chastisement of their negligence. " Avoid small sins," says St. John 
Chrysostom, " for they will grow into great sins." " He that is un- 
just in that which is little is unjust also in that which is greater" 
(Luke xvi. 10). As one who wants to cleave a log of wood makes 
a small incision, and then drives in the wedge, so the devil tempts us 
first to commit slight offences, and gradually leads us to greater trans- 
gressions. Venial sin is all the more dangerous because it deprives 
us of many actual graces, without which we cannot overcome the as- 
saults of temptation. A mirror when covered with dust cannot 
reflect an image clearly, and the mirror of the soul, if its surface be 
obscured by the dust of venial sin, is almost impervious to the rays 
of the Sun of justice. A personage of distinction cannot be expected 
to approach a man who is frightfully disfigured by some cutaneous 
disease, much less to embrace him, or even suffer him to kiss his 
hand; so God will not admit you to His friendship or delight you 
with His consolations if your soul is defaced by venial sin. Venial 
sin lessens our diligence in the pursuit of what is good. A trifling in- 
disposition often incapacitates us for the performance of the duties 
of our calling; in like manner venial sin weakens the will and in- 
disposes it for good works. It diminishes the force of charity, and 
makes a man lukewarm in the service of God. To him may be ap- 
plied the words of Holy Scripture: "Because thou art lukewarm, 
and neither cold nor hot, I will begin to vomit thee out of My 
mouth" (Apoc. iii. 16). 

2. There are temporal penalties due to venial sin, and these 
will come down upon ns either on earth or after death in pur- 
gatory. 

Zachary was struck dumb because he would not believe the 
message of the angel (Luke i. 20) ; Moses was not allowed to enter 
the Promised Land because of his incredulity (Numb. xx. 12). 
Ananias and Saphira fell dead at St. Peter's feet in consequence of 
the deception they practised. Those who at their death are in a state 
of venial sin, will have to pass through the fires of purgatory in order 
to expiate them before gaining admittance to heaven. On this ac- 



466 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

count the saints inflicted severe penalties upon themselves for the 
least sin. Venial sin must needs be a great evil, since God, Who is 
a merciful and gracious Father, punishes it with such rigor, namely 
by temporary exclusion from His kingdom, and prolongSi suffering 
in purgatory. 

IV. VICE. 

1. Vice is proficiency in the practice of evil, and the confirmed 
tendency of the will towards evil which is acquired by habitual 
sin. 

Everything is evil which is contrary to the will of God. A horse 
when put into harness for the first time, tries to shake off the collar. By 
degrees he became accustomed to it, and in time, when led out of 
the stable, he goes of his own accord to be placed between the shafts, 
although he has to undergo toil and fatigue. So man becomes ac- 
customed to the servitude of sin. A dog who is trained to the chase 
will in his eagerness outrun his master; so the man who is habituated 
to sin, makes more haste to sin than the devil does to incite him 
thereto. 

The habit of vice is easily formed, but it requires a great 
struggle to give it up, and the longer a man has indulged in 
vice, the more difficult that struggle becomes. 

Nothing is so easy to learn and so difficult to unlearn, as are 
vicious practices. The vicious drift down with the stream, the vir- 
tuous swim against the current. Good works are arduous to perform, 
but it is easy enough to do evil. To cast off the yoke of vice re- 
quires a hard battle. It is easier to fall into a pit than to get out of 
it again. The devil entangles the sinner in his toils, as the spider 
makes the fly fast in his web. When the sinner tries to shake him- 
seK free, he finds the flimsy web has become a heavy chain. As a 
vessel which has got loose from its moorings in a river is swept 
downwards, snapping like threads the ropes that hold it, so neither 
admonitions nor any considerations whatever prevail to arrest the 
downward course of a man who is addicted to vice, when he is carried 
away by his passions. The longer he goes on in sin, the stronger will 
be the habit formed, and the more difficult his conversion. The 
deeper a nail is knocked in, the harder it is to pull out ; so the longer 
a man persists in sin, the greater the effort needed to break off the 
habit. Those who shrink from jumping over the stream while it is 
a mere rivulet, will find themselves unable to cross when it has be- 
come a wide river. The repetition of a sin forms a habit, the habit 
becomes a necessity, and ere long it is impossible of eradication. 
This impossibility leads to despair and eternal damnation (St. Augus- 
tine). 

A man who is addicted to vice cannot amend of his own 
power; he needs the mighty assistance of divine grace, ^or 
can he amend all at once; a long and strenuous exertion of the 
will is required to achieve his conversion. Furthermore he must 



Fice, 467 

commence by combating one fault onlj^ that very one to which 
he is most prone. 

The snows do not melt unless the warm breath of spring passes 
over them, nor can man rise superior to his sins without divine 
grace. Those who have fallen into the pit of sin can only be lifted 
out of it by the help of God's grace. An old tree whose roots 
have run deep into the soil, cannot be torn up or bent down by ordi- 
nary means, so powerful graces are needed to effect the conversion of 
a hardened sinner. Remember the circumstances of St. Paul's con- 
version. For eighteen years St. Monica continued to weep and pray 
for her son's conversion. The sinner must first of all implore the aid 
of divine grace, or he will never be able to reform; better still if 
others will intercede for him. A man cannot all at once throw off 
the yoke of vice ; constant and persevering exercise of the will is nec- 
essary. Habit must be overcome by habit. A physical ailment of 
long standing takes a long course of treatment for its cure, and the 
maladies of the soul can only be removed by patient resolution. For 
even after the Sacrament of Penance, a propensity to the long-in- 
dulged sin still remains; evil passions are ready to spring up again 
unless one is ever on one's guard. If one who is addicted to vice de- 
sires to reform, he must grapple first with one fault; and precisely 
that one which has most dominion over him. A bundle of wood 
cannot be broken unless the sticks are drawn out one after another 
and broken separately ; the same course must be pursued in regard to 
our vices. If one is overcome, all the others are in great measure 
subdued. A military commander who is about to fall upon a hostile 
army, makes the attack at the point where the enemy is strongest, 
because if he takes that position, the conquest of the remainder will 
be an easy matter. Thus, if we overcome our dominant fault, we 
shall soon obtain the mastery over the lesser ones. If every year we 
rooted out one vice, we should soon become perfect men. Unhappily 
too many Christians only correct their lesser failings and allow their 
dominant fault to grow and flourish; or they rid themselves of one 
vice and become enthralled by another, like servants who leave one 
master only to take service with another. 

2. Habitual sin makes a man supremely unhappy, because it 
deprives him completely of sanctifying grace, subjects him en- 
tirely to the dominion of the devil, and brings down on him many 
temporal judgments as well as eternal damnation. 

The Holy Spirit does not dwell in the heart where vice reigns. 
Respectable people will not enter a tavern which is the resort of the 
drunken and dissolute, for the good have no fellowship with the evil. 
God will not make His abode in the sin-stained soul of the sinner. 
As one would rather live in the humble cottage, provided it be clean, 
than in a palace that was unclean and infected, so God will not visit 
the soul which is defiled and infected with the pestilence of sin. The 
ricious are completely under the dominion of the devil. The Roman 
emperor Valerian, having been taken prisoner by the King of Persia, 
was forced by the latter to make himself his footstool when he dis- 
mounted from his horse. Thus man, the son of the King of heaven, 
falls under the thraldom and servitude of the devil by the practice of 



468 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

vice. The just man is ever free, though he wear the chains of a 
slave; the sinner is ever enslaved, even on the throne; and every vice 
in which he indulges adds one more to his degrading fetters. A 
course of vice brings great misery upon a man in this life; loss of 
property, of health, of reputation; besides anxiety, discontent, etc. 
Sometimes God sends public calamities for the chastisement of 
nations that have sinned. Sin makes nations miserable (Prov. xiv. 
34). Was not Attila, the King of the Huns, surnamed "the scourge 
of God " ? Those who are the servants of vice shall not possess the 
kingdom of God (1 Cor. vi. 9, 10). "If you live according to the 
flesh, you shall die" (Kom. viii. 13). They who do the works of the 
flesh shall not obtain the kingdom of God (Gal. v. 19). When the 
fatal results of sin come upon the sinner, he makes good resolutions; 
but before long he is again led astray. Each time he repeats his sin 
his power of resisting it is lessened. Finally it works his ruin both 
for time and for eternity. 

The wicked do not possess sanctifying grace, consequently 
their understanding is greatly obscured, and their will greatly/ 
weakened. 

The understanding of the sinner is completely clouded. As cata- 
ract destroys the bodily sight, so vice obscures the eye of the soul. 
The passions which make their home in the heart of the sinner cloud 
his spirit and darken his intellect. As one who looks through a 
colored glass sees everything colored, so one who is the slave of his 
passions cannot judge of things aright ; he views them in a false light. 
Nor can he attain a true knowledge of himself; his mind is like 
troubled water, which reflects one's countenance in a distorted man- 
ner. The habitual sinner is so blinded that he regards abhorrent 
vices as virtues, and is angry if his attention is drawn to his evil 
habits, their disgraceful nature, and their fatal consequences. Rea- 
son is, however, never completely dethroned by the rebellious pas- 
sions. The will of the sinner is greatly weakened ; he becomes power- 
less for good. The more a man sins, the weaker he becomes. If one 
who has fallen into a deep sleep is called to awake or otherwise roused, 
he opens his eyes, and makes an effort to rise up; but overcome by 
drowsiness, he sinks back on his pillow. So it is with one who is sunk 
in the slumber of sin. He may be seriously admonished ; death, hell, 
judgment, and eternity, set before him ; he listens to it all, acknowl- 
edges it to be true, and makes some slight effort to amend; but the 
habit of sin and the love of the world hold him captive ; he presently 
relapses into sin. It is almost as impossible for one who lives in 
habitual sin to do good as for the Ethiopian to change his skin (Jer. 
xiii. 23). The habitual sinner ceases to struggle against sin. One is 
annoyed to see the first spot on a white garment; but after a second 
and a third and many others, one considers it as soiled, and one does 
not care what stains it contracts. 

3. The most ordinary sins are the seven capital sins: Pride, 
disobedience, anger, avarice, intemperance in eating and drinking, 
nnchastity, sloth. 

These are the seven sinful proclivities of the human heart, which 
are the origin of every sin. All other sins take their rise from them, 



The Forgiveness of Sin, 469 

as from their source. They are called vices, because they are produc- 
tive of permanent disorder in the soul. They are also simply called 
sins, because their outward manifestation may be venial or mortal 
sin, according as the offence is in a more or less weighty matter. 
One isolated act of a sin does not prove that sin to be habitual. 
They are called capital sins, because each one of these propensities 
is the head or centre whence other sins proceed. They are like com- 
manding officers, who come at the head of a whole army of sins to 
lay waste the heart. Each one is a poisonous root which will bear 
deadly fruit. The seven deadly sins in their turn originate in temp- 
tations to ambition, avarice, and luxury (1 John ii. 16). A full 
enumeration of the principal sins is not possible, because the dis- 
positions of every individual are utterly different, and the evil ten- 
dencies vary no less. Some reckon melancholy and vain-glory to be 
capital sins; envy is often placed among them, or again it is not 
mentioned as being the offspring of covetousness. Pride is univer- 
sally acknowledged to be the queen of sins; to it is given the prece- 
dence over all the other sins. He who is under the permanent 
dominion of a capital sin is a server of idols (Eph. v. 6), because he 
makes a creature (self, a fellow-being, gold, the pleasures of the 
table, etc.), his final end. Such a one serves Mammon and not God 
(Matt. vi. 24). As the seven deadly sins close the portals of heaven 
against us, they may be compared to the seven nations which opposed 
the entrance of the Israelites into the Land of Promise (Deut. vii. 
1). They are the seven devils whom Our Lord cast out of Mary 
Magdalen (Mark xvi. 9) ; the seven wicked spirits who enter into 
the man who has lost sanctifying grace (Luke xi. 26) ; they are the 
seven fatal diseases of the soul, which end in death. Pride resembles 
madness, disobedience blood poisoning, anger fever, covetousness con- 
sumption, intemperance dropsy, unchastity the plague, sloth par- 
alysis. He who will be a friend of God must divest himself of these 
vices. Before we lay out a beautiful garden, the thorns and weeds 
must be rooted up. So those who desire their own sanctification 
must first eradicate their faults. 



V. THE FOKGIVENESS OF SIN. 

1. There is no man upon earth without sin; consequently 
there is none who does not need the forgiveness of sin. 

" If we say we have no sin, the truth is not in us " (1 John i. 8). 
The just man falls seven times (Prov. xxiv. 16). God permits us 
to fall into venial sin again and again, to keep us humble. As we 
sin daily, we must daily ask for the forgiveness of sin in the Our 
Father. Only by reason of an exceptional privilege, such as was 
bestowed by God upon His blessed Mother, can mortal man pass 
the period of his sojourn upon earth without committing venial sin 
(Council of Trent, 6, 23) ; nay more, without the succor of special 
grace it is impossible to avoid venial sin for any length of time. The 
highest perfection of which human frailty is capable is this: Not to 
commit any sin, even venial sin, with deliberate intention. 

2. We can obtain forgiveness of sin, because Christ merited it 



470 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

for us by the death of the cross; and because He gave power to 
forgive sins to His apostles and their successors. 

There is nothing more consoling for mankind upon earth than the 
forgiveness of sins, for nothing causes us more misery than sin. 
Even in pagan times Socrates looked forward hopefully to the advent 
of a mediator who would teach mankind in what manner remission 
of sins was to be obtained. Christ earned the grace of forgiveness 
for us by His sacred Passion and death upon the cross (Council of 
Trent, 6, 7). Christ is the Lamb of God, Who taketh away the sins 
of the world (John i. 29). In Him we have redemption through His 
blood, the remission of sins (Col. i. 14). Christ is the propitiation 
for our sins, and not for ours only, but also for those of the whole 
world (1 John ii. 2) . Christ conferred the power to forgive sins only upon 
the apostles and their successors. He Himself exercised this power 
in the case of Mary Magdalen, Zacheus, the good thief; when He 
healed the paralytic He said expressly : " That you may know that the 
Son of man hath power on earth to forgive sins, I say unto thee, 
Arise, take up thy bed, and go" (Matt. ix. 6). This same power 
which He possessed Our Lord gave to the holy apostles, when, after 
His resurrection He said to them: "Receive ye the Holy Ghost. 
Whose sins you shall forgive they are forgiven them, and whose sins 
you shall retain, they are retained" (John xx. 23). He therefore 
who would have his sins forgiven must address himself to the bishop 
or to the priests whom Christ has appointed. In the Catholic Church 
alone is remission of sins, for she alone has received the Holy Ghost 
as a pledge of this grace (St. Augustine). 

3. Mortal sin is remitted by Baptism and penance, venial sin, 
and the temporal penalties due to it, by good works done in a 
state of grace. These good works are: Prayer, fasting, alms- 
giving, hearing holy Mass, receiving holy communion, use of the 
sacramentals, gaining indulgences, forgiving offences. 

Baptism is the ship in which we embark on our voyage to heaven ; 
if we commit mortal sin we are like men who are shipwrecked. The 
only hope for them of being saved is in laying hold of a plank, and 
clinging firmly to it; so for the Christian, the only means of reach- 
ing the port of eternal salvation is through the Sacrament of Pen- 
ance. 'Not prayer, fasting, nor almsgiving in itself can procure for 
man the forgiveness of mortal sin; these can only lead to penance, 
by which sin is washed away. Angels and archangels have no power 
to alter this ; nay, " The Redeemer Himself does not forgive sin 
without penance" (St. Augustine). Good works, do, however, avail 
for the expiation of venial sin. Thus St. Augustine declares: "A 
single Pater Noster said from the heart, will obliterate the venial 
sins of a whole day." Venial sins can also be remitted by the use 
of holy water, indulgences, prayers, communion, the blessing of a 
bishop, etc. 

4. There is no sin too great for God to forgive here below, if 
it be sincerely repented of and humbly confessed. 

God makes this promise to the contrite sinner : " If your sins be 
as scarlet, they shall be made white as snow; and if they be red as 



Temptation, 471 

crimson, they shall be white as wool " (Is. i. 18). God makes no dis- 
tinction between sinners; He permits the priest to forgive every sin 
without exception. Therefore no man is so godless and wicked but 
he may yet hope to obtain forgiveness, provided he is sincerely sorry 
for his transgressions. In fact God receives the sinner more gra- 
ciously the greater his sin has been, just as a fisherman pursues his 
work more gladly, the bigger the fish he catches. The sin against the 
Holy Ghost is the only one which admits of no forgiveness, because 
the man who sins against the Holy Ghost is the man who will not 
amend. The fault does not rest with God, but with the man ; for even 
if he acknowledges his sin he will not abandon it, and consequently 
does not bewail it. Without contrition and change of heart there is 
no forgiveness. 

5. A sin once forgiven is effaced forever, even if the sinner 
falls again into mortal sin. 

This is not the case with good works. They are reckoned again 
to a man's account, if he makes his peace with God. See how mer- 
ciful is God almighty ! 



VI. TEMPTATION. 

1. Temptation is the action of the evil spirit upon our soul, 
in order to induce us to sin; he excites within us the concupis- 
cence of the eyes, or the pride of life. 

Remember the temptation of Eve in paradise, and the threefold 
temptation of Our Lord in the desert. All the saints were greatly 
tempted: St. Hugh, Bishop of Grenoble, was tempted to blaspheme; 
St. Francis of Sales was tempted to despair; St. Francis of Assisi 
was tormented by suggestions of impurity. Some saints experienced 
temptations against the faith; some temptations lasted for years. 
God tempteth no man (Jas. i. 13) ; He simply permits man to be 
tempted. It is the devil who hammers at you when you are tempted. 
" Our wrestling is against the spirits of wickedness in high places " 
(Eph. vi. 12). On earth we are surrounded by robbers; many of us 
are overcome and wounded by them. The conflict with the spirit of 
evil is a more critical struggle ; it is carried on covertly, and against 
a more powerful adversary — one who spares no pains and knows no 
shame; who, when he is repulsed, returns all the more defiantly to the 
attack. For six thousand years he has tempted mankind; such long 
practice has made him perfect. He excites within us concupiscence 
of the flesh, or concupiscence of the eyes, or the pride of life (1 John 
ii. 16). In this threefold manner he tempted Our Lord. Many 
temptations come upon a man through no fault of his own (witness 
Job) ; some are the result of culpable negligence (witness Eve). The 
evil enemy as a rule attacks our weak point, our affection for crea- 
tures. Like a fowler, he attracts the birds to his net by offering them 
the food they like best. Physical infirmities give the devil more 
power over us; every one knows how apt the sick are to be fretful, 
impatient and exacting. The devil sets to work craftily. He trans- 
forms himself into an angel of light (2 Cor. xi. 14) ; that is, he de- 



472 Good Worksj Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

ceives us by assuming an appearance of candor and piety. His arti- 
fices prove his weakness; he would not resort to them were he power- 
ful enough to do without them. 

Temptation is not in itself sinful, only acquiescence in the 
suggestions of the tempter is sin. 

Hence we ought not to be alarmed and uneasy when we feel the 
incentive to sin, but we should trust in God^s help, saying : " O Lord, 
make haste to help me ! Jesus and Mary be my help ! " To tremble 
in the hour of temptation betrays a want of confidence in the divine 
assistance ; the devil will assail the fearful soul only the more fiercely. 
Unless we remain calm, we cannot possibly conquer. Those who lose 
their composure are like a bird caught in the net ; the more it flutters 
and tries to escape, the more it becomes entangled in the meshes. 
Our Lord promises us : " In your patience you shall possess your 
souls" (Luke xxi. 19). The good Christian is like a soldier, who as 
a rule rejoices when war breaks out, in the prospect of gaining rich 
booty. 

2. God allows us to be tempted out of mercy, for the good 
of our souls. 

As the schoolmaster examines his scholars in order to give them 
a good testimonial, so God deals with the souls of men; He allows 
us to be tried by temptation to give us the opportunity of manifest- 
ing our loyalty to Him, and acquiring a claim to the recompense He 
promises us. Thus He has only our welfare in view. The tempter 
however, the evil enemy, means no good to us; he aims at our ruin, 
as the history of Job testifies. Temptations may therefore be said to 
be a mark of the divine favor. The archangel Raphael said to 
Tobias : " Because thou wast acceptable to God, it was necessary 
that temptation should prove thee" (Tob. xii. 13). God sends temp- 
tations to those whom He trusts ; hence it is that those who fear Him 
are more sorely tempted than other men. The devil does not tempt 
those who are already in his power, but those whom he fears will 
elude his grasp or who may be injurious to him. St. Ephrem in a 
vision saw a large city, the inhabitants of which were very corrupt; 
only one devil was sitting on the wall, and he was half asleep. But 
in the desert he saw a whole swarm of devils busily engaged within 
the cell of a hermit. Thus the fact that a man is greatly tempted 
proves him to be a friend of God, and a stranger to, an enemy of 
the devil. Pirates do not attack an empty ship, but one which they 
know to be returning home with a valuable cargo. A king does not 
take up arms against loyal subjects, but against rebels who resist 
his authority. Temptations have besides the following advantages: 
They rouse us from a state of tepidity (they are what the spur 
is to the horse) ; they cleanse us from imperfections, as the stormy 
sea throws out foreign substances ; they make us humble, by acquaint- 
ing us with our frailty; they increase our strength, as a high wind 
makes the tree strike deeper root; they augment our charity, as the 
breeze makes the flame burn more fiercely; they afford us a means 
of expiating sin in this life; finally, they add to our glory hereafter, 
as the beauty of a jewel is enhanced by polishing. Thus we see that 
the tempter does us good service, and his temptations are steps in the 



Temptation, 473 

ladder which leads to heaven. Therefore let him who is tempted 
rather pray for strength to resist the temptation than for its entire 
removal. We read that St. Paul thrice besought the Lord that the 
angel of Satan might depart from him, and asked in vain (2 Cor. xii. 
8). 

God permits every man to be tempted, but He never per- 
mits us to be tempted beyond our strength. 

Temptations must come to every man. No one can be crowned 
unless he has conquered; no one can conquer unless he fight, and no 
one can fight without an adversary. Hence temptations must come. 
For this reason God subjected the angels to a probation, and also our 
first parents. And subsequently to the Fall trials have been the lot 
of mankind (witness Job and Tobias). " The life of man upon earth 
is a warfare " (Job vii. 1). The Apostle compares the Christian to one 
who runs in a race (1 Cor. ix. 25). "Yet God will not suffer us to 
be tempted above that which we are able to bear" (1 Cor. x. 13). 
The devil can only tempt man within the limit God sets him, as we 
learn from the history of Job. And when God permits violent temp- 
tations to assail us. He gives grace sufficient to enable us to withstand 
them (2 Cor. xii. 9). The stronger the temptation, the more abun- 
dant is the grace ; the greater the danger, the more potent the divine 
assistance. No sinner can venture to say as his excuse that the 
temptation was too great for him to resist. 

3. We ought to protect ourselves from temptation by assiduous 
work, by keeping our thoughts fixed upon God, and by continual 
self -conquest. 

In order to hold a fortress against the enemy two things are 
necessary: (1) Strong fortifications and well-guarded gates; (2) In 
case of attack valiant defence. In like manner we must protect our 
soul, to prevent the entrance of the evil enemy. Our fortifications 
will be: Continual occupation; this is the surest means of holding 
temptations aloof. Thieves do not break into a house where work 
is going on. Idleness is the parent of crime. We shall also find it 
easy to resist temptation, if we keep our mind fixed on God. A trav- 
eller journeying towards a fixed destination meets with few difficul- 
ties on his way, whereas the vagrant, wandering hither and thither, 
is sure to get in trouble. So it is with the Christian who makes God 
his final end, and one who has no aim in life. Hence Christ exhorts 
us : " Watch ye and pray, that you enter not into temptation " (Matt. 
xxvi. 41). Wolves do not approach a watch fire and the devil leaves 
those alone who are on their guard. When Moses stood with arms up- 
lifted to God, Israel was victorious; but when through weariness he 
let them fall, that moment the enemy prevailed. The majority of the 
sins good people commit come from forgetfulness of God's presence; 
the habit of self-control also greatly helps us to conquer temptation. 
He who is accustomed to repress his impulses is like a soldier, well 
trained in the use of arms before he goes to battle. Practice in self- 
conquest strengthens the will. But attachment to creatures makes a 
man an easy prey to the devil ; just as one who carries a heavy load 
cannot run away when robbers attack him. 



474 Good Works, Virtue, Bin, Vice. 

4. When we are tempted we ought to betake ourselves imme- 
diately to prayer, or think of our last end, or of the evil conse- 
quences of sin. 

If the enemy dares to attack the fortress in spite of the ramparts 
raised about it, it behooves us to defend it manfully. When assailed 
we must instantly assume the defensive; for of all things it is most 
important to repulse the first onslaught. The greater our determina- 
tion, the sooner will our adversary be discouraged. If we falter, he 
will force an entrance, and gain the mastery over our imagination. 
He acts like soldiers, who when they have taken the enemy's guns, 
instantly turn them upon him. St. Jerome says that he who does not 
resist immediately is already half conquered. A conflagration can 
be extinguished at the outset, but not later on. A young tree is easily 
bent, not an old one. But since we can do nothing in our own 
strength, we must strive to obtain divine grace. Wherefore let him 
who is tempted have recourse to prayer; let him imitate the apostles 
when a storm arose on the sea of Genesareth; or the child who, 
when he sees a large dog coming, runs to his mother, He who 
neglects prayer in the time of temptation is like a general, who, when 
surrounded by the enemy, does not ask for reinforcements from his 
monarch. Adam fell into sin because when he was tempted he did not 
look to God for help. We should say a Hail Mary, or at least de- 
voutly utter the holy names of Jesus and Mary. " These holy 
names," St. John Chrysostom declares, " have an intrinsic power over 
the devil, and are a terror to hell." At the name of Mary the devils 
tremble with fear; when she is invoked their power forsakes them as 
wax melts before the fire. Prayer is the weapon wherewith to ward 
off the assaults of our spiritual foe; it is more potent than all the 
efforts of the demons because by prayer we procure the assistance 
of God, and nothing can withstand His might. Prayer is exactly op- 
posed to temptation for it enlightens the understanding and fortifies 
the will. The sign of the cross and holy water have also great effi- 
cacy against the spirit of evil. He flies from the cross as a dog flies 
at the sight of the whip. Holy water derives its efficacy from the 
prayers of the Church. St. Thomas Aquinas and many other saints 
frequently made use of the sign of the cross with excellent results. 
St. Teresa on the other hand constantly employed holy water. It is 
well to sprinkle the sick and dying with holy water, and we should 
never omit to take it on entering a church. A second means of con- 
quering temptations is to turn our thoughts elsewhere, above all to 
think of the last things: of death, of the judgment, of eternal pun- 
ishment. "Kemember thy last end and thou shalt never sin" 
(Ecclus. vii. 40). Or we may consider the terrible consequences of 
sin. The Romans used to say : " Whatever thou doest, act wisely and 
think of the end." In some cases, especially when temptations 
against the faith or against purity present themselves, the wiser 
course is to despise the temptation rather than grapple with it. 
Proud people, like the devil, are soonest got rid of by ignoring them 
altogether. If the passer-by takes no notice of the dog, he soon leaves 
off barking. If one keeps still the bees do not harm him, but if one 
drives them off, then they sting. Again, we may follow Our Lord's 
example, and resolutely forbid the tempter to remain. Christ re- 



Occasions of Sin. 475 

piised him with the words: "Begone, Satan" (Matt. iv. 10). St. 
James bids us : " Resist the devil and he will fly from you " ( Jas. 
iv. 7). The devil is like an angry woman, who blusters if she sees 
that her husband is afraid of her, but who gives way directly if he 
exerts his authority. One may also retort upon the tempter by quot- 
ing the word of God, as Our Lord did (Eph. vi. 17). St. Peter says: 
"Whom resist ye, strong in faith" (1 Pet. v. 9). Another means of 
overcoming temptation is by humbling ourselves before God. " To 
the humble He giveth grace" (1 Pet. v. 5). St. Augustine in the 
hour of temptation was accustomed to exclaim : " Thou knowest, O 
Lord, that I am but dust and my frailty is great." When we are 
pressed hard by temptation, it is well to confess to the priest those 
sins of our past life of which we are most ashamed; this is a sure 
means of repelling the severest temptations. It is advisable to ac- 
quaint one's confessor with all one's temptations. Satan would have 
us keep silence concerning them, whereas it is God's will that we 
should discover them to our superiors and spiritual guides, for if 
sinful thoughts are disclosed, the temptation is already half over- 
come. To open its griefs gives, moreover, great relief to the troubled 
heart. 

5. He who has conquered temptation will receive more 
graces from God. 

When we have driven away the spirit of evil, the holy angels come 
and console us. We read that when the tempter had left Our Lord 
angels came and ministered to Him (Matt. iv. 11). Pierce tempta- 
tions are generally the precursors of special marks of the divine 
favor. Therefore, let us see that we make a good use of tempta- 
tions, one and all. They are like examination at a school; exam- 
inations are not held every day, so the opportunity of gaining a prize 
does not come within the reach of the pupils every day. 



VTL OCCASIONS OF SIN. 

1. By occasions of sin are meant such places, persons, or things 
which as a rule are the means of leading us into sin, if we go in 
quest of them. 

Por instance, the society of the dissolute, the perusal of anti- 
religious books are an occasion of sin to every one ; so is the drinking- 
saloon to the drunkard. Occasions of sin may be compared to a 
plague-stricken person, who gives the contagion to all who approach 
him; or to fire, which burns all that it touches, or to a stone in the 
way, which causes many to stumble. 

Occasions of sin may be voluntary or involuntary. 

The drinking-saloon is a voluntary occasion of sin to the ineb- 
riate, because nothing obliges him to frequent it; but to the landlord 
himself it is an involuntary one. 

2. To expose one's self heedlessly to an occasion of sin, is in it- 
self a sin; it entails the loss of divine grace and leads to mortal 
8in. 



476 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

Every one knows it is wrong to carry a burning torch into a plauc 
where hay, straw, and other inflammable materials are stored. To 
delight in occasions of evil and to fall into sin, St. Augustine de- 
clares to be one and the same thing. St. Peter sought the company 
of the enemies of Christ in the high priests' palaces and he fell, for 
God withdrew His grace. " He that loveth danger shall perish in it " 
(Ecclus. iii. 27). "He that toucheth pitch shall be defiled with it" 
(Ecclus. xiii. 1). 

3. He who finds himself in circumstances which are an occa- 
sion of sin to him, and does not instantly leave them, although it 
is in his power to do so, commits a sin; he will be deprived of the 
assistance of divine grace and will fall into mortal sin. 

In paradise Eve sinned by not going away from the tree. St. 
Augustine says our first parents ought not to have so much as 
touched the forbidden fruit. Cleomenes, King of Sparta, was once 
urged by a foreign prince to betray his country for a large sum of 
money. The king's little daughter, hearing what was proposed, ex- 
claimed : " Father, go quite away or the stranger will corrupt thee." 
The king instantly left the room and would not suffer the stranger to 
enter his presence again. Let us be equally prompt in forsaking occa- 
sions of sin. 

4. He who refuses to give up what is to him an occasion of sin, 
cannot expect to obtain pardon of sin here, or eternal salvation 
hereafter. 

One who so acts has no contrition, that determinate turning away 
from creatures and turning to God, which is an indispensable con- 
dition for forgiveness of sin. Hence one who might give up an 
occasion of sin without great difficulty and does not do so, must not 
expect absolution from the priest. It is otherwise if giving up the 
occasion of sin involves loss of reputation, of property, of the means 
of livelihood; but even then he must promise either to abstain from 
the sin, or avoid the occasion of it. We know from Our Lord's words 
that hell awaits those who will not forsake the occasions of sin : " If 
thy hand or thy foot scandalize thee, cut it off and cast it from thee. 
It is better for thee to go into life maimed or lame, than having two 
hands or two feet, to be cast into everlasting fire " (Matt, xviii. 8) ; 
that is to say, although any object be as dear to you as your hand or 
your foot, you must separate yourself from it, if it is an occasion of 
sin to you, or hell will be your portion. "What sacrifices men will 
make," says St. Augustine, " to preserve their mortal life; they shrink 
from no expense, no humiliation; yet they will make no sacrifice for 
life immortal." As a man consents to the amputation of his hand or 
foot if it is a question of saving his life, so the sinner must detach 
himself from what he loves best, in order to save his soul. Traders 
will cast all their merchandise into the sea to save the ship and their 
own lives from destruction; so we must part with all to which our 
heart clings most fondly, rather than imperil our eternal salvation. 

Hence even the greatest saints did not venture lightly to 
^pose themselves to the danger of sin. 

Their watchword was : " Safety is in flight." It is said that St. 



Occasions of Sin, 477 

Peter on the outbreak of the persecution, fled from Rome, fearing lest 
he should again be tempted to deny Christ; not until Our Lord ap- 
peared to him outside the city gates did he venture to expose him- 
self to the danger. And shall those who are the slaves of their 
senses consider vigilance to be superfluous? Will one who cannot 
swim dare to plunge into the water? 

Those, however, who by reason of their calling or any other 
necessity, are compelled to expose themselves to occasions of 
sin, must put their trust in the protection of the Most High. 

Officials, priests, doctors and others are often compelled by the 
duties of their office to incur many dangers. If they do not tempt 
God by presumption, they may count upon the assistance of His 
grace; but not so those who in an uncalled-for manner and with- 
out just cause expose themselves to the risk of sin. 

5. The most common and the most dangerous occasions of sin 
are : liquor saloons, dancing saloons, bad theatres, bad periodicals, 
and bad novels. 

Some one may perhaps ask : Is one expected to live like a recluse 
or a misanthropist ? St. Augustine answers this question : " Better 
and holier people than thou have forsworn those amusements ; canst 
not thou do the same ? The Christian's pleasures are not taken from 
him, they are changed and ennobled." Again he says : " How sweet it 
is to renounce the vain enjoyments of the world! I shrank from the 
obligation to forego them, and now I rejoice in having lost them." 
" The worldling," says St. Bernard, " sees our afflictions, but he 
knows not our consolations." Those are no true joys which are not in 
God. 

1. The liquor saloon is principally dangerous for those who 
go thither every day, and spend a long time there. 

There is nothing sinful in frequenting a saloon as a recreation 
after the day's work; in fact taverns are necessary for the enter- 
tainment of travellers. But one ought to be careful as to the charac- 
ter of the house one frequents, so as not to associate with hard 
drinkers, or men whose conversation is unseemly. Unfortunately 
those who spend much of their time in the saloon are apt to acquire 
the habit of drinking and gambling, to be involved in quarrels, and 
to neglect the duties of their calling. 

2. The dancing saloon is chiefly a source of danger to those 
who carry dancing to an excess, or who have already been led 
into sin by it. 

In the art of dancing there is nothing evil or reprehensible; 
it is in itself nothing more or less than an innocent means of enjoy- 
ment and relaxation, and of promoting good feeling and friendly in- 
tercourse among men. Among the Jews the dance was often made 
a part of divine worship ; we read that when the Ark of the Covenant 
was removed, David danced with all his might before the Lord (2 
Kings vi. 14). The Hebrew maidens performed round or processional 
dances on many religious festivals (Judg. xxi. 21; Exod. xv. 20)*, 



478 Good WorlcSf Virtue, Sm, Vice. 

and St. Basil and St. Gregory the Great state as their opinion that 
the angels move in the solemn measures of the dance before the 
throne of God in heaven. However the rule must be strictly observed 
of not dancing at prohibited times (in Advent or Lent) nor with per- 
sons of improper character (as is often the case at public balls), and 
of not taking part in dances which outrage modesty and decorum, 
as some do in the present day. Young people must, however, be 
warned against indulging in this amusement inordinately, as it has 
a tendency to arouse sensuality, to excite the passions, and lessen the 
sense of Christian modesty. Living as they did in heathen times, 
the Fathers of the Church denounced dancing in no measured terms. 
On the occasions of weddings, entertainments, or family gather- 
ings, when dancing is proposed as the evening's amusement, it would 
be unfriendly to refuse to take part. But those for whom dancing has 
often proved an occasion of sin, must if possible eschew it for the 
future; they may allege as an excuse that it is injurious to them„ 

3. The theatre is a source of danger to those who frequent it, 
because some theatres are a school of vice rather than of virtue. 

When dramas of an elevating and edifying nature are put upon the 
stage, plays in which virtue and innocence triumph, and heroic devo- 
tion to religion, the love of one's country, the love of one's neighbor, 
are held up to admiration, and the misery and shame attendant upon 
crime depicted in its true colors, the theatre becomes a school of 
morals. But good plays are rare : they ill suit the taste of the present 
day; and often they would be acted to an empty house. The majority 
of plays, more especially on the continent of Europe, are of a ques- 
tionable tendency; in France, in Italy, vice — some illicit affection — 
is often represented upon the stage as attractive and delightful, while 
virtue is uninteresting and despicable. Even the freethinker Kous- 
seau says that in the theatre our evil propensities are too often fos- 
tered and encouraged, our power to resist the force of our passions 
is diminished, we learn to regard work as irksome, and useful employ- 
ment as distasteful. Moreover, it cannot be denied that the heated 
atmosphere of a crowded house and the late hours are prejudicial to 
the health of the habitual play-goer. 

4. Bad periodicals are dangerous to all who read them; their 
effect is to gradually undermine the faith and awaken discontent 
in the minds of those who read them regularly; and whoever 
takes such journals, declares himself an enemy to religion. 

The society papers of the day pander to the popular taste. Scan- 
dals in high life, political feuds, animadversions on the conduct of 
prominent persons, sneers at religious ordinances, the defence of 
wroiig-doers, such is the pabulum too often provided for the reader. 
The writers in such papers are frequently those who have fallen low 
in the social scale, and the editors are in many cases Jews. The 
Holy Father has said that a large proportion of the countless evils 
of the day and the unhappy condition of society are to be ascribed 
to the journals that issue from the press, and he exhorts the faith- 
ful to endeavor to counteract their corrupting influence by upholding 
those that are of an opposite tendency. Not only may this be done 
by subscribing to some Christian periodical, lending it to others. 



Tlie Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Princival Vices. 479 

asking for it at reading-rooms and hotels, but by contributing letters 
and sending advertisements to journals of whose principles we ap- 
prove. He who underrates the importance of the press displays little 
knowledge of the times in which he lives. The press is a gigantic 
power, especially since it has taken the telegraph and telephone into 
its service, and can thus supply the reader with the latest intelli- 
gence from all parts of the world. The daily papers are therefore 
taken in and eagerly read by all classes of society. And since, in 
addition to the latest news, they pronounce a verdict upon, all ques- 
tions of the day, concerning religion, politics, science, art, commerce, 
etc., the press is the great educator of the masses, the source whence 
the people derive their information and form their opinions. The 
press may well be said to be the organ of public opinion. Even as 
early as the commencement of the present century, when the press first 
began to be developed, the Emperor Napoleon spoke of it as a sixth 
great European power. He expressed himself thus because he was 
sensible of the influence exercised by the Ehine Mercury, which had 
just been started by Gorres. Hence we learn how important a duty 
it is to support and encourage the Catholic press. 

5. Bad novels are dangerous to all, for the novel-reader ac- 
quires a false and exaggerated view of life. 

Indiscriminate novel-reading must be avoided, for a large propor- 
tion of works of fiction present poison in a golden goblet. Crime 
and vice, sins of immorality, are not only justified; they are arrayed 
in the most fascinating garb, depicted in the most charming colors. 
Thus they rouse and inflame the dormant passions of the human 
heart. A novelist once while being shown over a prison, was ad- 
dressed by two young fellows. " You ought to be wearing these hand- 
cuffs instead of us," they said to him, " for it was through you that 
we got here." Many works of fiction are, it is true, of a perfectly 
harmless character. But even at the best the habitual reader of 
romances is transported into an unreal world, and is rendered in- 
capable of judging justly of the world of actuality. Books of general 
interest, such as the lives of saints and of distinguished personages 
are far preferable to romances, for the facts they contain bear the 
stamp of truth, and are much more improving to the mind than fic- 
tion is. 



Vin. THE SEVEN PRINCIPAL VIRTUES AND THE 
SEVEN PRINCIPAL VICES. 

1. HUMILITY. 

1. Tke humble man is he who acknowledges his own nothing- 
ness and the nothingness of all earthly things, and comports him- 
self in accordance with this conviction. 

The heathen centurion at Capharnaum displayed great humility 
when he said to Our Lord : " Lord, I am not worthy that Thou 
shouldst enter under my roof, but only say the word and my servant 
shall be healed" (Matt. viii. 8). Notwithstanding his position, his 



480 Good Worhs, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

wealth, his good works — ^he had built the Jews a synagogue— he 
thought nothing of himself. Humility is twofold; it consists of 
humility of the understanding, by which a man becomes conscious 
of his own abjection, and humility of the will, which causes him to 
manifest his consciousness in his conduct; he humbles himself, and 
takes the lowest place. That would be false humility which was 
merely external, not heartfelt. St. Bonaventure defines humility as 
voluntary self-abasement resulting from the knowledge of our own 
frailty. 

"We learn hmnility by the consideration of the infinite 
majesty of God and the transitory nature of earthly things. 

The poor man feels his poverty most keenly when he compares 
himself with his opulent neighbor. St. Augustine prayed for the 
knowledge of God, that he might thereby know himself. The majesty 
of God is most apparent in creation. In the firmament of heaven 
are many million orbs far surpassing in magnitude our earth, which 
is but a speck of dust in the universe. How insignificant then is 
each individual man! Must not the pride of every one be humbled 
at the sight of the endless myriads of worlds that people space, and 
which no man can count? And what is one single man among the 
hundreds of millions that inhabit the earth, not to speak of those that 
have lived in the past, and will live in the future. All earthly things 
pass away like a shadow and have no value before God. " The grave," 
says St. John Chrysostom, " is the school wherein we learn humility." 
Let no man pride himself on his riches; he may lose them in a 
single night; he must lose them at his death. Let no man pride 
himself on his physical beauty, for it may be disfigured by disease, 
and after death will be the prey of worms. Let no man pride him- 
self upon his knowledge; how soon he forgets what he has learned, 
and how immeasurable is the amount of what he does not know ! A 
philosopher of antiquity used to say: "All I know is that I know 
nothing." " If it seem to thee that thou knowest many things and 
understandest them well enough, know at the same time that there 
are many more things of which thou art ignorant " (Imitation, Book 
1, ch. 2). Besides all our knowledge is ignorance compared with the 
infinite wisdom of God. Let no man pride himself upon earthly 
honor, for to-day the people cry " Hosanna," and to-morrow " Crucify 
him." How shortlived is the power and prestige of earthly potentates 
(witness ]!^apoleon). Let no man pride himself even upon the 
graces he has received from God, for they may be withdrawn at any 
moment, and they increase his responsibility. Neither let him pride 
himself upon his good works, for God has no need of his goods (Ps. 
XV. 2). After we have done all, we are unprofitable servants (Luke 
xvii. 10). Whatever therefore a man may possess, he in reality pos- 
sesses nothing or next to nothing. The humble man is no hypocrite; 
he only forms a just estimate of things. 

The humble man conducts himself in the following man- 
ner: He delights in abasement, he does not attach his heart to 
transitory good things, he trusts wholly in God, and does not 
fear man. 



The Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices. 481 

The humble man delights in abasement; he never unnecessarily 
attracts attention to himself, i.e., he avoids ostentation and singu- 
larity in his demeanor and deportment, in his conversation, his ges- 
tures, at prayer, in dress, at table. He never seeks to make his 
humility conspicuous by downcast eyes, a slouching gait, a dejected 
mien; he is humble of heart, like Our Lord; he only allows his 
humility to be observed when occasion requires, and then only simply 
and unaffectedly. He is not always calling himself the chief of sin- 
ners ; uncalled for self -blame generally betokens pride. Furthermore 
he hides his talents, for he knows that what man reveals God con- 
ceals, and what man disclaims, God proclaims. St. Anthony of 
Padua concealed his great erudition until God made it known. The 
humble man does not think himself better than others; he esteems 
others above himself (Phil. ii. 3). He does not publish the failings 
of others, he does not choose the highest place (Luke xiv. 10) ; on the 
contrary, he rejoices in being slighted, despised, humiliated, knowing 
that for this C^od will exalt him (Luke xiv. 10). Thus it was with 
the publican in the Temple (Luke xviii. 13) ; the humble man aspires 
only after eternal treasures, and does not attach his heart to what 
is transitory. Earthly good things, riches, dignities, pleasures, the 
praise of men, do not allure him; he is aware that he is none the 
better for them in God's sight, and they may prove his ruin. Earthly 
sufferings, contempt, reproaches, ridicule, persecution, do not dis- 
hearten him; he glories in them, because they enable him to earn 
heaven. He despises contempt, because it cannot harm him. Thus 
St. Paul writes : " To me it is a very small thing to be judged by 
you, or by man's day " (1 Cor. iv. 3). The humble man trusts in God 
alone. Conscious of his own weakness he does not confide in his 
own strength, but only in the aid of divine grace; as Joseph did 
when required to interpret Pharao's dream (Gen. xli. 16). He does 
not take to himself the credit even of his virtues and good works, 
but ascribes all to God, knowing that it is God Who worketh in Him ; 
as the sun calls vegetable life into being upon the earth. Yet he is 
ready to acknowledge the favors God confers on him, saying with the 
blessed Mother of God : " He that is mighty hath done great things 
to me" (Luke i. 49). The recognition of these favors makes him 
grateful to God and increases his love of God. "No one," says St. 
Teresa, " will do great things for God, who does not know that God 
has done great things for him." The humble man does not fear men, 
because, far from being cast down by any humiliation he may meet 
with at their hands he rejoices in it. Besides he knows that he is in 
God's safekeeping, and to them that love God all things work 
together for good (Rom. viii. 28). Discouragement and pusillanimity 
are not characteristics of true humility. 

2. Christ gave us in Himself the grandest example of humility, 
for He, bein^ the Son of God, took the form of a servant, chose to 
live in great lowliness, was most condescending in His intercourse 
with men, and finally, voluntarily endured the ignominious death 
of the cross. 

Christ emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant, i.e., human 
nature (Phil. ii. Y). In the Sacrament of the Altar He even takes 
the form of bread. And at the baptism of Our Lord the Holy Spirit 



482 jrooi Worhs, Virttie, Sin, Vice. 

assumed the shape of an animal, the dove. The prophets, in predict- 
ing the coming of Christ spoke of Him under the designation of the 
Lamb of God. Thus we see how ahnighty God humbles Himself. 
Our Lord lived in great lowliness; He chose for His birthplace not 
a royal palace but a stable; for His Mother, not a queen but a poor 
maiden ; for His foster-father a humble carpenter ; for His dwelling- 
place an obscure town; for His apostles, not the philosophers and 
sages of the world, but simple and unlearned fishermen. In His 
intercourse with men Our Lold was most condescending; He encour- 
aged children to approach Him, He even conversed with sinners (e.g., 
the Samaritan woman, Mary Magdalen, the woman taken in adul- 
tery) ; at the Last Supper He washed His disciples' feet, and made 
not the slightest objection to go to the house of the centurion, when 
the latter entreated Him to cure his servant (Matt. viii. 7). Cruci- 
fixion was at that time the most ignominious death by which a man 
could die, yet Christ chose that very death for Himself; showing by 
His own actions that humility is the royal road to God. 

In His teaching also Our Lord exhorts us constantly to the 
practice of humility. " He that is the greatest among you shall 
be your servant" (Matt, xxiii. 11), and again: "When you 
shall have done all these things that are commanded you say: 
"We are unprofitable servants " (Luke xvii. 10). 

Moreover He commends humility in the parable of the Pharisee 
and the publican (Luke xviii. 13). On one occasion he took a child 
and said : " Whosoever shall humble himself as this little child, he is 
the greater in the kingdom of heaven " (Matt, xviii. 4). He presents 
Himself to us as a pattern of this virtue: "Learn of Me, because I 
am meek and humble of Heart, and you shall find rest to your souls " 
(Matt. xi. 29). Finally, He promises that the humble shall be ex- 
alted (Luke xiv. 11), and shall enter into the kingdom of heaven 
(Matt. V. 3). 

3. Humility leads to great sanctity, to exaltation, and to 
everlasting felicity. 

Furthermore through it wo obtain enlightenment of the un- 
derstanding, true peace of mind, forgiveness of sin, a speedy 
answer to prayer, and are enabled to overcome temptation with- 
out difficulty. 

God is with the humble. If any one has a lowly opinion of him- 
self, and considers himself inferior to others, it is an unfailing proof 
that the Holy Spirit dwells within him. In the first place the 
humble man attains a high degree of perfection. The more humble 
he is the more perfect he is, and vice versa. Well-filled ears of corn bend 
downwards, the thin ears hold their heads aloft. Empty vessels make 
the most sound. " He who thinks much of himself," says St. Teresa, 
" thinks much of little ; he who thinks little of himself, thinks little 
of much." Humility is the surest test of sanctity. St. Philip l^eri 
was once sent by the Holy Father to a convent in the vicinity of 
Rome one of whose inmates enjoyed a reputation for sanctity, in 
order to test the truth of that report. As soon as he entered the 



The Seven Princival Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices, 483 

parlor, he requested the nun in question to clean his boots, which 
were covered with mud. She replied in no very courteous manner 
that she was unaccustomed to such work. St. Philip returned to the 
Pope and said : " She is no saint and works no miracles, for she 
lacks what is most essential, humility." Humility leads to exalta- 
tion. Our Lord says : " Every one that exalteth himself shall be 
humbled, and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted " (Luke xiv. 
11). No man can ascend who has not first descended. "Be 
humbled in the sight of God and He will exalt you" (Jas. iv. 10). 
The blessed Mother of God attributed all the graces she received 
from God to her humility: "He hath regarded the humility of His 
handmaiden; for behold, from henceforth all generations shall call 
me blessed" (Luke i. 48). Honor pursues him who flies from her, 
humility leads to everlasting felicity. Our Lord says: "Blessed are 
the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven " (Matt. v. 3). 
The gate of heaven is narrow, and only little ones, i.e., the humble, 
can pass through. Humility is also a means of obtaining enlighten- 
ment of the mind through the Holy Spirit. The humble alone can 
enter into the spirit of Our Lord's teaching. He Himself says : " I 
confess to Thee, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because Thou 
hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed 
them to little ones" (Matt. xi. 25). St. Peter says: "God resisteth 
the proud, but to the humble Hegiveth graces" (1 Pet. v. 5). The 
communications of the Most High are with the simple (Prov. iii. 
32), that is, He enlightens his mind. Hence it is that the poor and 
unlearned sometimes have a truer knowledge of the things of God 
than the learned. The shepherds were informed of Christ's birth, 
the Scribes and Pharisees were not. He must stoop who desires to 
draw water out of the fountains of God's grace. St. Teresa says 
that one day in which we humble ourselves before God is more fruit- 
ful in graces than many days spent in prayer. The humble man 
attains true peace of mind. Our Lord says : " Learn of Me, for I am 
meek and lowly of Heart, and you shall find rest to your souls " (Matt, 
xi. 29). The humble are not lifted up by prosperity nor cast down 
by adversity. The humble man obtains forgiveness of sins. The 
publican who smote upon his breast and said : " God, be merciful to 
me a sinner," went down to his house justified (Luke xviii. 13). The 
humble man obtains a speedy answer to prayer. " The prayer of him 
that humbleth himself shall pierce the clouds" (Ecclus. xxxv. 21). 
The humble man overcomes temptation without difficulty. Humility 
is the most powerful weapon wherewith to vanquish the devil. It is 
the virtue he most fears, for it is the only one which he is unable to 
imitate. 



2. THE OPPOSITE OF HUMILITY : PRIDE. 

1. He is proud who overestimates his own worth, or the value 
of his earthly possessions, and shows openly that he does so. 

The giant Goliath was proud; he exalted himself overmuch 
(1 Kings xvii.). Many a one overrates the worth of his body, is 
proud of his fine physique, the beauty of his features; others over- 
rate the worth of their wealth, their learning, their birth, the 



484 (jrood Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

virtues they imagine themselves to possess, etc. The proud man re- 
sembles the devil, or a drunkard, for pride is a kind of intoxication 
which fills one with strange fancies and makes one talk in a foolish 
manner and do irrational things. Pride is like a bubble that looks 
large, but whose size is deceptive; it is a color which fades in the 
sun, for the proud will appear in all their native, vileness when, after 
death, they stand in the light of the Sun of justice. They are like 
the frog in the fable who puffed himself out in the hope of appearing 
as large as the ox. 

The proud man manifests the undue opinion he has of him- 
self in the following manner: He tries to attract notice by his 
conversation and his dress, he strives after honor, distinctions, 
and earthly riches, he despises the assistance and grace of God, 
and relies only on himself and on earthly things. 

Pride is a mimicry of God. The proud man desires to appear 
greater than he is. If he has done anything good, he boasts loudly of 
it, as a hen cackles when she has laid an Q^g. Sometimes he speaks 
depreciatingly of himself, but only in the hope of hearing others 
praise him the more. He slanders others and thinks evil of them, 
as the Pharisee did in the Temple (Luke xviii. 11). Pride makes 
itself manifest in dress; the proud dress above their station, they 
dress showily, in the latest fashion, and wear a great many unneces- 
sary ornaments. The people who attach so much importance to dress 
are not as a rule the most virtuous. They are extravagant, hard- 
hearted to the poor, and deceitful, for by dressing unsuitably to their 
class they give themselves out for what they are not. Love of dress often 
leads to worse sins, for those who spend so much care on the adorn- 
ment of their person lose sight of their final end, and lead a godless 
life. He who stands well in God's sight has no need of choice and 
costly apparel; good and holy people have generally dressed in a 
simple, quiet manner. The Emperor Heraclius found that he could 
not carry the true cross, which had been recovered from the Saracens, 
back to Jerusalem, until he had laid aside his rich garments; an un- 
seen hand held him back. One ought however to dress properly and 
suitably to one's position, and have a strict regard to cleanliness. 
The proud pursue honors as boys hunt after butterflies; and when 
they have gained them, they exult as loudly as if they had achieved 
something wonderful, although they have nothing to boast of in 
reality ; for the honor and applause of men are like the morning dew, 
glittering with rainbow tints, but quickly disappearing in the sun, 
or like smoke which the wind carries away. How foolish are they 
who covet earthly glory ! The proud man despises the help and grace 
of God, and relies upon himself alone, trusting in the things of earth. 
He is his own deity. " The beginning of the pride of man is to fall 
off from God " (Ecclus. x. 14) . The proud neglect prayer and the 
ordinances of religion; they are not sensible of their own sinfulness 
and misery, or if they are they will not apply to the physician, but 
try to heal themselves. Hence it is that God is the enemy of the 
proud. "God resisteth the proud" (1 Pet. v. 5). Pride is hateful 
before God and man (Ecclus. x. 7). 

2. Pride leads to all manner of vices, to degradation here and 



The Seven Priiicipal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices. 485 

eternal damnation hereafter ; it also destroys the value of all our 
good works. 

Pride leads to all maimer of vices. Pride is the beginning of all 
sin (Ecelus. x. 15), the parent of vice; many and evil are her progeny. 
Pride leads more especially to disobedience (witness Absalom) ; to 
cruelty (as in Herod's case, to the murder of the innocents), to 
apostasy (as with Luther, who was offended because he was slighted 
at Rome) ; to strife, envy, ingratitude and impurity. God punishes 
secret pride by open sin. He permits the proud to fall into sin in 
order that they may be humbled and amend. He who has vanquished 
pride has vanquished all other vices. When Goliath fell, the Philis- 
tines took to flight ; when the root is torn up the tree withers. Pride 
leads to degradation. " He that exalteth himself shall be humbled " 
(Luke xiv. 11). The lightning strikes what is highest; a lofty tree 
is often struck down by the bolt. Apply that to the proud. Aman, 
the chief minister of the King of Persia, persecuted the Jews and 
arrogated to himself regal honors ; he ended by being hung on a gib- 
bet (Esth. vii. 10). King Herod was delighted at being called a god; 
he was eaten of worms and died (Acts xii. 22). God hath over- 
turned the thrones of proud princes (Ecelus. x. 17). He often chas- 
tises the pride of nations, and even destroys them altogether (witness 
the fall of the Roman empire). God even abolishes the memory of 
the proud (Ecelus. x. 21) (witness the destruction of the tower of 
Babel). Abasement and disgrace follow in the footsteps of pride. 
Pride also leads to eternal damnation. It was the cause of the 
angels being cast out of heaven, and our first parents being expelled 
from paradise. As one scale in a balance drops as the other rises, 
so those will be abased in the world to come who exalt themselves 
in this world. Pride destroys the value of our good works. The 
proud have received their reward already (Matt. vi. 5). Pride pulls 
down the structure that justice raises. As a drop of gall spoils the 
flavor of the most delicious wine, so pride ruins virtue. It is like the 
little worm that caused Jonas' ivy to wither. Whatever good a man 
may have done, if he pride himself upon it, he is utterly destitute. 



S. OBEDIENCE. 

1. Obedience consists in being ready to fulfil the behest of 
one's superior. 

Thus obedience does not merely consist in doing what is com- 
manded, but in being ready and willing to do what is commanded. 
Many obey, but obey grudgingly ; in that case obedience is no virtue. 
Moreover obedience is not a virtue unless it is for God's sake that one 
subjects one's will to that of another. Abraham was a pattern of 
obedience when he offered up Isaac. The Son of God Himself prac- 
tised obedience, for He was subject to two of His creatures, Mary 
and Joseph. The Creator of all things obeyed an artisan, the Lord of 
glory a lowly maiden. Who ever heard or saw anything to compare 
with that? Christ was moreover obedient to His heavenly Father 
even to the death of the cross (Phil. ii. 8). By the obedience of one 



486 6^00^ Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

many shall be made just (Rom. v. 19). " I admire," says St. Francis 
of Sales, " the Infant of Bethlehem; He is all-powerful, and yet does 
whatever He is told without a word." 

1. Children are required to obey their parents, or those who 
hold the place of parents to them, wives their husbands, servants 
their masters, and all men those who are placed in authority over 
them, whether ecclesiastical or secular rulers. 

In order to unite all His creatures to a harmonious whole God has 
established a certain relationship between them, and mutual depend- 
ence. The moon revolves round the earth and the planets of our 
solar system around the sun. The angels stand in the same relation- 
ship to one another as men do on earth. In the Fourth Command- 
ment God enjoins upon children obedience to their parents; this is 
due to them as being God's representatives. St. Paul says : " Chil- 
dren, obey your parents in all things" (Col. iii. 20). And again: 
" Those who are disobedient to parents are worthy of death " (Rom. 
i. 30). Teachers are the parents' representatives. Wives must obey 
their husbands, for so God has appointed. He said to Eve after the 
Fall : " Thou shalt be under thy husband's power, and he shall have 
dominion over thee" (Gen. iii. 16). The very origin of the woman 
proves her subjection to man, for she was made of his flesh, and thus 
belongs to him. As a mark of inferiority the woman's head must be 
covered (1 Cor. xi. 7). St. Peter teaches servants their duty towards 
their masters in the following words : " Servants, be subject to your 
masters with all fear, not only to the good and gentle, but also to the 
f reward " (1 Pet. ii. 18). Our Lord admonishes us to obey our eccles- 
iastical superiors, saying : " Whoso will not hear the Church, let him 
be to thee as the heathen and the publican" (Matt, xviii. 17). Be- 
cause of the obedience required of Christians, he calls them sheep 
and those who are set over them pastors. We ought also to obey the 
secular authorities, because they have their power from God. St. 
Paul says : " There is no power but from God, and those that are, are 
ordained of God. Therefore he that resisteth the power, resisteth the 
ordinance of God" (Roin. xiii. 1, 2). 

2. Yet obedience has certain limits; we are not required to 
obey our superiors in matters that are not within their jurisdic- 
tion, and we ought not to obey them if they command us to do 
what the law of God forbids. 

(This subject is fully treated of under the head of the Fourth 
Commandment.) 

2. Obedience is the most difficult and at the same time the 
most excellent of all the moral virtues (St. Thomas Aquinas). 

Obedience is the most difficult of virtues because all men are 
naturally inclined to command, and disinclined to obey. " Obedi- 
ence," says St. Bonaventure, " is the sacrifice of one's own will, and it 
is a great sacrifice for man, when what is commanded is contrary 
to his inclination and to his advantage." By obedience the under- 
standing does penance; it is a kind of moral martyrdom. Original 



The Seve7i Principal Virtues and' the Seven Principal Vices. 487 

sin is the cause why men are under the yoke and dominion of one 
another. Where sin enters freedom is dethroned, and servitude takes 
its place. Obedience is the most excellent of all virtues. Man can 
offer to almighty God nothing greater than the submission of his 
will to that of another for God's sake. Obedience is the most accept- 
able burnt-offering that we can sacrifice to God upon the altar of the 
heart. Obedience is better than sacrifices (1 Kings xv. 22) ; and for 
this reason, in a sacrifice we offer the flesh of another; in obedience 
the oblation is our own will, our own self. 

3, By our obedience we accomplish the will of God most surely, 
and we attain certainly and quickly to a high degree of perfection. 

By obedience we accomplish the will of God most surely, for our 
superiors are God's representatives, therefore their commands are 
God's commands. Thus we serve as to the Lord and not to men 
(Eph. V. 7). We ought not to consider who it is who issues the 
behest, but only the will of God which is made known to us by the 
mouth of our superior. He who obeys will not be required to give 
an account of what he has done; the one who commands has to do 
that. Obedience gives value to all that we do. The simplest action 
done out of obedience has greater value in God's sight than the most 
austere works of penance. Eating and sleeping, if done in obedience 
to the will of God, are more pleasing to him than the voluntary fasts 
and vigils of the hermit. By obedience we attain certainly and 
quickly to a high degree of perfection. Obedience is the means of 
avoiding many sins. It is the antidote to pride. By the practices of 
the other virtues we combat the spirits of evil, by obedience we van- 
quish them. And this is just, for since they fell through disobedience, 
by our obedience we show our superiority to them. St. Augustine 
calls obedience the greatest of virtues ; it is the parent and source of 
every other virtue. St. Teresa declares that no path leads so quickly 
to the summit of perfection as the path of obedience; hence the evil 
enemy endeavors by all means to deter us from the practice of this 
virtue. Obedience is the key that opens the portals of heaven, the 
ship that carries us into the celestial harbor. Disobedience closed 
heaven and opened hell; obedience on the other hand opens heaven 
and closes hell. " Learn," says St. Francis of Sales, " to comply 
willingly with the wishes of thy equals, and thus thou wilt learn to 
fulfil cheerfully the commands of thy superiors." Above all, when 
you have to obey, obey promptly, do not stop to deliberate; for 
reasoning is only a hindrance to obedience. Remember that Eve 
began to waver as soon as she allowed herself to argue about the 
divine command. 



4. DISOBEDIENCE. 

1. Disobedience consists in not fulfilling the commands of one's 
superiors. 

Our first parents in paradise are an instance of disobedience. He 
who does not obey his superiors, is like a palsied limb, which does not 
move as the will commands. 



488 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

2. Disobedience brings temporal misfortune and eternal misery 
upon man. 

Even in this world misery is the result of disobedience. Think of 
the fatal consequences of original sin! Adam's offence was the 
means of bringing evil upon all his posterity. Pharao's disobedience 
brought sad calamities upon himself and his subjects; remember 
the plagues of Egypt and the destruction of the king and his army in 
the Ked Sea. The prophet Jonas had bitter cause to rue his dis- 
obedience. Eternal perdition is also the consequence of disobedience. 
God rejects the disobedient, as the money-changer rejects a counter- 
feit coin. The disobedient must expect a severe sentence in the Day 
of Judgment, for in despising their superiors, they have despised, 
not them, but Him Whose representatives they are. Disobedience de- 
prives us of all merit. No virtue is acceptable to God if it is marred 
by the stain of disobedience; it then is changed from a virtue to a 
vice. Disobedience also deprives us of many graces which we might 
have obtained through obedience. 



5, PATIENCE, MEEKNESS, PEACEABLENE8S. 
PATIENCE, 

1. Patience consists in preserving one's serenity of mind amid 
all the contrarieties of this life for the love of God. 

Some persons are patient in order to make themselves admired. 
Many on the other hand, accept cheerfully only a part of their suffer- 
ing : e.g., they will endure sickness patiently, but they cannot endure 
to be a burden to others on account of it. That is not being truly 
patient. Our Lord affords us the most exalted example of patience 
in His Passion. Our heavenly Father also exhibits Himself to us as 
a model of patience, for He bears with sinners, even with those who 
provoke His justice, as perjurers and blasphemers do. Job and 
Tobias were remarkable for their patience. The patient man is like 
a rock in the ocean, on which the waves break. Again, he may be 
compared to a lamb, which does not utter a sound when it is slain. 

The trials of life in which it specially behooves us to main- 
tain our tranquillity of mind are: Sickness and reverses, relapse 
into sin, the pressure of many and onerous duties appertaining to 
our calling. 

Sickness and reverses are not really calamities; they are graces. 
God sends them upon us for the good of our souls. We ought there- 
fore to welcome them. We must not be irritated with ourselves if 
by reason of our frailty we relapse into our old sins, and thus are 
forced to acknowledge that there is more of the human than of the 
angelic nature about us. We must have as much patience with our- 
selves as with our fellow-men. Our Lord says : " Bring forth fruit 
in patience" (Luke viii. 15). We must not lose our equanimity 
when our work is pressing and difficult. Excitement creates haste. 



The Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices. 489 

and hastiness always does harm, just as an overflowing stream, or 
violent rain, destroys and devastates. We ought to imitate the angels 
who minister to man without disquiet or hurry. We ought also to 
wait with patience for the end of our life and our entrance upon eter- 
nal felicity (Rom. viii. 25). 

Tranquillity of mind is displayed by not yielding to anger, 
or to sadness, or complaining to any great extent and calling for 
the commiseration of others. 

We ought not to yield to anger. Anger obscures the reason and 
makes an act unjustly. " The anger of man worketh not the justice 
of God" (Jas. i. 20). Nor ought the tribulations of this life to 
render us sad. There is indeed a sadness which is pleasing to God, 
that which is caused by the loss of eternal things. Our Lord 
says : " Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted " 
(Matt. V. 5). But the sorrow of the world, i.e., that of the world- 
ling over the loss of mundane things, worketh death (2 Cor. vii. 10). 
" Sadness hath killed many, and there is no profit in it " (Ecclus. 
XXX. 25). It is, however, allowable to complain on account of severe 
physical or mental suffering, so long as we submit to the will of God. 
Our Lord uttered complaints upon the cross; our heavenly Father 
frequently complained of the conduct of sinners by the mouth of 
the prophets. But a medium must be observed ; we must not lament 
over trifles, nor let our complaining be prolonged or exaggerated; 
to do so is to evince selfishness or cowardice. Complain to God as 
long and as loudly as you will, for your complaints are an appeal to 
Him for help, and consequently are pleasing to Him. But if you fill 
a fellow-creature's ear with the sad tale of all your care, he will 
soon weary of your conversation. Not so God; He is ever ready to 
hear you, and to impart to you such consolation as will cause you to 
forget all your sorrow. Our Lord says : " Come unto Me, all you that 
labor and are burdened, and I will refresh you" (Matt. xi. 28). 

2. Patience produces many virtues and leads to salvation. 

St. Teresa says that if we bear slight things patiently, we shall 
acquire courage and strength to bear great things. The patient man 
displays fortitude equal to that of the martyrs. Patience is the 
guardian of all the virtues, for there are obstacles to be encountered 
in every good work, and they can only be overcome by patience. 
St. Gregory the Great declares that by unwavering patience the 
crown of martyrdom may be acquired without the sword. The 
patient man is greater than he who works miracles. Patience leads 
to salvation. " In your patience you shall possess your souls " (Luke 
xxi. 19). Fragile things are not so likely to be broken if they are 
wrapped in wool, nor are our souls so likely to be lost if they are safe- 
guarded by patience. The patient man is like a ship at anchor in a 
peaceful harbor, protected from the stormy waves of the ocean. 

3. If we would bear with patience the trials of life, let ns 
place Our Lord's Passion before our eyes; let us also consider 
that sufferings are a favor from God. 

Think upon the Passion of Christ. He drank of the bitter cup, 
in order to overcome our repugnance to drink of it; He suffered first. 



490 Good Works, Virtue^ Sin, Vice, 

that we might not fear suffering. Frequently think of Christ cruci- 
fied ; your sufferings cannot be compared with His, either in intensity 
or in number. A soldier scarcely feels his hurt, if he sees his general 
to be severely wounded. "Let the sick man," says St. Francis of 
Sales, " offer his pains to God, and pray Him to accept them in union 
with the sufferings of Christ." Kemember the words the archangel 
Raphael said to Tobias: "Because thou wast acceptable to God, it 
was necessary that temptation should prove thee" (Tob. xii. 14). 
Without suffering there is no salvation, for " through many tribula- 
tions we must enter into the kingdom of God" (Acts xiv. 21). As 
the bitter pill is coated with sugar to render it palatable, so when we 
look forward to the rich recompense in store for us the chalice of 
suffering loses its bitterness. The laborer could not labor all day long 
without the anticipation of the wages to be paid him, and the 
thought of our eternal reward enables us to bear the trials of life 
with patience. Think of the martyrs, and of others who have 
greater afflictions than you, and your thorns will lose their sharp- 
ness. Beware of losing merit by impatience ; remember that you 
must suffer, either willingly or unwillingly; if you suffer willingly, 
you will earn great merit; if unwillingly, you do not diminish, but 
only add to your suffering. Patience is displayed pre-eminently by 
meekness and peaceableness. 



MEEKNE88, 

1. Meekness consists in showing, for the love of God, no irrita- 
tion when wrong is done us. 

Many persons are meek through timidity or for convenience' 
sake, but that is no virtue. One who is meek does not excite himself 
when he is wronged, i.e., he bears injustice in silence, and is polite 
and obliging to the offender. There is something divine in meek- 
ness. God Himself is infinitely long-suffering ; He does not exert His 
almighty power against transgressors. He bears with the sinner, 
and gives him ample time for repentance. God appeared to Moses in 
the burning bush (Exod. iii.), to Elias He spoke by the whistling 
of a gentle wind (3 Kings xix. 12). This was not without a deep 
significance. The Holy Spirit also assumed the form of a dove, and 
Our Lord proclaimed Himself by the mouth of the prophets to be the 
Lamb of God (Jer. xi. 19). Who can fail to be astonished at the 
meekness of God when we behold the Redeemer upon the cross? 
Meekness is agreeable to the Lord (Ecclus. i. 35). God chose Moses 
on account of his meekness and sanctified him (Ecclus. xlv. 4). 

2. By meekness we gain power over our fellow-men, we attain 
peace of mind, and eternal salvation. 

Our Lord says: "Blessed are the meek, for they shall possess 
the land" (Matt. v. 4), that is they shall gain command over others. 
Those who are meek gain the affections of their fellow-men, and 
render them kindly disposed. K one who is incensed against another 
is met with meekness, his anger vanishes as darkness is dispelled on 
the rising of the sun. A mild answer breaketh wrath (Prov. xv. 1). 
Bad men may be won by kindness. He who subdues anger within 



The Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices, 491 

himself will be able to conquer it in others also. A good example 
of the effect of meekness is given by the conduct of Blessed Clement 
Hofbauer when he was collecting alms for orphan children in War- 
saw. Going up to a group of men at a card table in an hotel he asked 
them for a donation. One of the card-players spat in his face. Hof- 
bauer quietly wiped his face, and said : " That, sir, was for myself ; 
I ask you now for something for my poor children." The man was 
greatly ashamed, and gave Hofbauer all the money he had about 
him; what is more, a few days later he went to him and made a 
general confession. St. Francis Xavier was stoned by the Indians 
while he was preaching. He went on without taking the slightest 
notice. The Indians who had thrown the stones were so amazed 
at his meekness that they were the first to be baptized. He who has 
complete mastery over himself will find all the world subject to 
him. Far more is done by meekness than by anger. " One catches 
more flies," says St. Francis of Sales, " with an ounce of honey, than 
with tons of vinegar." If two hard substances strike against one 
another, a loud crash ensues, but if a hard substance comes against 
what is soft, scarce a sound is heard. One must bear with the irate 
as one bears with the sick, for anger is a moral malady. "Anger 
resteth in the bosom of a fool" (Eccles. vii. 10). By meekness we 
gain peace of mind. For Our Lord says : " Learn of Me, for I am 
meek and lowly of Heart, and you shall find rest to your souls " (Matt, 
xi. 29). Consequently the meek are always cheerful. By meekness 
we gain eternal salvation. The land promised by Christ to the meek 
is heaven (Ps. xxxvi. 11). There was a servant who could not con- 
trol his angry temper, despite all his master's rebukes and admoni- 
tions. One day the latter promised him half a dollar if he would 
not utter an angry word all day long. The man refrained from a 
single outburst, although his fellow-servants were extremely pro- 
voking. When his master gave him the half dollar at night, he said : 
" If you can conquer yourself for the sake of so paltry a sum, how is it 
that you cannot do so in view of an eternal reward ? " These words 
had the effect the speaker desired ; he had no cause to complain of the 
man in future. 

3. Meekness can only be acquired by the diligent practice 
of self-control. 

St. Francis of Sales, naturally of a choleric temperament, at- 
tained in the course of twenty years such perfect mastery over him- 
self that he was thought to be phlegmatic by nature. 

4. We ought to behave with meekness towards those with 
whom we live, and superiors ought to be gentle towards their 
inferiors. 

It is especially incumbent upon us to be meek in our intercourse 
with those with whom we live. Some do not observe this rule; they 
are angels abroad and devils at home. Superiors ought to show 
meekness towards their subordinates ; but meekness in them is called 
gentleness. More is done by gentleness than by severity. For the 
human mind is so constituted that it resists force and yields to 
mildness. Superiors should be rigorous to themselves and lenient 



492 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

towards those under them. Meekness was the chief characteristic 
of the apostles. Our Lord said to them : " Behold, I send you as 
sheep in the midst of wolves " (Matt. x. 16). It ought also to be the 
chief characteristic of the Christian; for Christ speaks of the faith- 
ful as sheep (John x. 1), or lambs (John xxi. 15) ; both these animals 
are remarkably gentle. 

PEAGEABLENE88. 

1. Peaceableness consists in willingly making a sacrifice for 
the sake of remaining at peace with one's neighbor, or reconciling 
one's self with him. 

Abraham was content to take the worst portion of the land, in 
order to keep the peace with Lot's servants (Gen. xiii.). St. Francis 
of Sales was unjustly expelled from a lodging he had taken in Rome; 
he quitted it without a murmur, and the next night a hurricane de- 
stroyed the house. St. Ignatius of Loyola, when returning from 
Palestine, was rudely refused a passage in the ship on which he 
wished to embark. That vessel sank on its way to Europe; the one 
in which he sailed got safely to port. Peace is invaluable to mankind. 
The angels who announced the birth of Christ could wish nothing 
better to man (Luke ii. 14). Our Lord promised to give His peace 
to His apostles (John xiv. 27), and He saluted them with the words: 
"Peace be to you" (John xx. 26). This was also the salutation He 
placed upon their lips when He sent them forth to preach (Matt. x. 
12). All the good things of this world cannot please us, if we are 
not at peace, for without peace we can enjoy nothing. Peacemakers 
are like God; He is not the God of dissension, but of peace (1 Cor. 
xiv. 33). He is the Lord of peace (2 Thess. iii. 16). The prophets 
foretold His coming as the Prince of peace (Is. ix. 6). And at the 
birth of Christ the temple of Janus was closed, because peace reigned 
everywhere. 

2. Peacemakers enjoy the special protection of God, and receive 
a hundredfold as the reward of all that tliey give up for the sake 
of peace. 

Our Lord says : " Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be 
called the children of God" (Matt. v. 9). God will replace a hun- 
dredfold all that we surrender for the sake of peace. We have seen 
how St. Francis of Sales and St. Ignatius were saved from disaster 
and death through their love of peace. E'ot only in this world, but also 
in the life to come, does God reward us for all that we do for His 
sake (Mark x. 29). Forgiveness and forbearance are better than 
contention and complaining. 

3. Hence every one ought to be willing to make concessions 
for the sake of peace, and as far as lies in his power, to avoid all 
that may engender strife. 

We ought to put up with a great deal for the sake of peace. 
"Bear ye one another's burdens" (Gal. vi. 2). Many people are 
peaceable as long as no one interferes with them, and all goes on in 



The Seve7i Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices. 493 

accordance with their will; but the slightest contradiction irritates 
them terribly. Such people are like stagnant water, which is all well 
enough as long as it is left alone; but stir it up, and it emits a most 
unpleasant odor. We ought also carefully to avoid everything that 
may stir up contention. One should never contradict any one without 
a good reason. St. Teresa bids us never to enter upon a strife of 
words about matters of no importance, especially at one's own fire- 
side. A ship in which the timbers are not well joined will sink; so 
every community will fall to pieces whose members are not welded 
together with the bonds of love. However, one must not for the sake 
of peace omit or give up anything which God commands; that is 
not the peace God desires ; hence Our Lord says : " Do not think that 
I came to send peace upon earth; I came not to send peace but the 
sword " (Matt. x. 34). Some people will not let you be at peace with 
them unless you acquiesce in their evil deeds, such peace is un- 
lawful. 

6. THE OPPOSITE OF MEEKNESS: WRATH. 

1. Wrath consists in exciting one's self about something at 
which one is displeased. 

The man who is in a rage is more like a beast than a man. His 
countenance is distorted, he gnashes his teeth, raises his voice, ges- 
ticulates wildly, stamps with his feet and knocks things over, etc. 
Were he to look in the glass, he would hardly know himself. Those 
who are of a choleric temperament carry their anger about with 
them everywhere, as the viper does its venom; they are like a surly 
dog which barks and bites if you do but touch him; like flint that 
gives out sparks when it is struck; like an empty vessel which cracks 
when put on the fire. Were the vessel full of water, it would not 
break; were the heart full of grace, its patience would not give way. 
Angry people always put the blame of their anger on others, but 
experience proves that they give way to irritability when they are 
alone. Zeal for God's glory is called just anger; such was the anger 
Our Lord displayed, when He drove the sellers of doves and the 
money changers out of the Temple (John ii.), or Moses, when, re- 
turning from the Mount, he saw the people worshipping the golden 
calf. Just anger is not really anger; it is the offspring of charity, 
and like charity, is patient, kind, calm, and not actuated by hatred. 
Just anger is quite lawful. "Be ye angry and sin not" (Ps. iv. 5). 
That anger alone is sinful which desires to take personal revenge. 

2. Those who indulge anger injure their health, temporarily 
lose the use of reason, make themselves hated, and incur the 
danger of losing eternal salvation. 

How foolishly those act who are transported with anger! They 
punish themselves for another man's fault. Anger is prejudicial 
to the health and shortens one's life. It causes the gall to overflow, 
and poisons the blood. The man who is in a rage is like the angry 
bee which loses its sting, or like a volcano, that widens its crater and 
burns itself out. Anger exhausts the body in every part. When a 
man is in a rage, he trembles in every limb, his heart beats high, his 



494 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vm, 

tongue falters, his face burns, his eyes glow like fire, he shouts 
aloud. Anger cherished in the breast destroys life as the worm at the 
root of a tree. " Envy and anger shorten a man's days " (Ecclus. 
XXX. 26). Many men have had a stroke brought on by anger, some 
have fallen down dead through rage. If anger is so hurtful to the 
body, what must it be to the soul! Anger temporarily deprives a 
man of the use of reason. Every violent emotion troubles the under- 
standing. The mind of an angry man is like the surface of the sea 
when lashed into fury by the waves; it reflects nothing distinctly. 
Aristotle compares the effect of anger on the mind to that of smoke 
in the eyes, or it may be compared to a fog, through which it is im- 
possible to see things in their true proportions. Anger is an intoxica- 
tion, a temporary madness; for one who is thoroughly enraged is 
not master of his own actions. Hence St. Francis of Sales, speaking 
of one who was mad with anger, said: " Lord, forgive him; he knows 
not what he does." Thus in his anger a man will act most unjustly; 
he will do what he afterwards regrets. The anger of man worketh 
not the justice of God. Men in their anger are worse than wild 
beasts, for the lion when he is enraged does not fall upon his compan- 
ion lions, whereas the irate man vents his wrath upon his fellow-men. 
He is worse than the evil spirits, for they live in amity with one 
another, although they are the authors of all dissension. And how 
men rage against one another! Whence come blows, murders, feuds, 
lawsuits? A man who is easily provoked to anger is hated by his 
fellow-men; he is as little welcome as a hurricane or a waterspout; 
every one avoids an angi-y man as every one gets out of the way of a 
mad dog. He has no friends: "Be not a friend to an angry man, 
and do not walk with a furious man" (Pro v. xxii. 24). Men are 
easily led by calm reason, but they resist if an angry man attempts 
to domineer over them. It is easier to deal with a brute beast than 
with a man who is prone to anger, for the beast may be tamed, but 
with the wrathful man one is never safe. He who gives way to 
wrath is in danger of eternal damnation, for he deprives himself 
of grace. The Holy Spirit does not dwell in the heart where anger 
abides, for where anger is there is no peace. As the inhabitant of a 
house constructed of wood is in constant danger of having it burnt 
down, so the choleric man is in constant danger of injuring his soul 
and being cast into everlasting fire. In fact hell has already begun 
for him, since he is a prey to unceasing agitation and unrest. 

3. Anger must be overcome in the following manner: We 
must never speak or act when we are angry, but if possible, be- 
take ourselves to prayer. If in our anger we have injured any 
one, we should make amends for the wrong done without delay. 

One must never speak nor act when one is angry. One should 
do as mariners do; when a storm arises they cast anchor, and wait 
until the tempest is over. St. Francis of Sales, on being asked how 
he could remain so imperturbably placid in regard to persons who 
were raging with anger, replied : " I have made an agreement with 
my tongue never to utter a word while my heart is excited." A 
heathen philosopher once counselled the Emperor Augustus to repeat 
the twenty-four letters of the Greek alphabet when he felt within him 



The Seven Prmcipal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices, 495 

the ebullition of angry passions. "Let every man be slow to speak 
and slow to anger" (Jas. i. 19). Silence is an act of patience; this 
enables one to conquer. When the excitement is allayed, one can act as 
one thinks best. Prayer is very efficacious as a means of dispelling 
anger. When we feel the rising of passion within us, we should do as 
the apostles did when a storm arose on the lake. They went to Our 
Lord for succor. If we do so, God will command the waves of anger 
to be still, and calm will ensue. The saints counsel us to repeat 
eilently an Ave Maria as a means of driving away the devil who 
tempts us. Or one may recite the Gloria Patri; at any rate we must 
have recourse to prayer immediately, for if we delay, our anger will 
gain ground, and will not be easily quelled. If we have offended any 
one in our anger, we should make amends by extreme politeness. 
"Let not the sun go down upon your anger" (Eph. iv. 26). Wrath 
frequently begets hatred. " It is better," says St. Francis of Sales, 
*' never to let anger into thy heart, than to keep it within the bounds 
of prudence and moderation; for it is like a viper which if it once 
gets its head through a hole, slips its whole body through; and once 
admitted, it is no easy matter to drive it out." 



7. LIBERALITY, 

1. Liberality consists in being ready and willing, for the love 
of God, to give pecuniary assistance to those who are in need. 

He who relieves the needy in order to elicit the praise of others 
has no claim to the virtue of liberality, for he is not actuated by the 
love of God. Even the poor may be liberal, for liberality does not 
depend upon giving largely, but upon giving with a good will; it is 
the disposition of the giver that makes the gift great or small. The 
liberal man is like God, for by showing mercy we resemble our 
heavenly Father, Whose mercy is perfect and infinite. The heathen 
sage Seneca used to say : " He resembles the gods who distributes to 
the poor." 

2. By liberality we obtain forgiveness of sin, an eternal re- 
ward, and temporal blessings, besides a speedy answer to prayer 
and the friendship of our fellow-men. 

This subject has already been considered. The liberal man rejoices 
those on whom he bestows his gifts, as the sun gladdens the earth 
with its rays. Christ could not employ a more forcible argument to 
urge us to perform works of mercy than by saying that what was 
given to the poor was given to Him. 



8. THE OPPOSITE OF LIBERALITY: AVARICE. 

1. Avarice consists in an inordinate craving for riches, which 
makes a man not only strive after them, but refuse to give any 
portion of his goods to the poor. 

We call it an inordinate desire for riches when a man strives 
to gain far more than he really requires for himseK and his family, 



496 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

and is never content, however much he possesses. Thus he is cove- 
tous. He is like a vessel without a bottom, that is never full, however 
great the quantity of liquid that is poured into it. He is like the 
wolf that is always hungry; like the fire, that ever requires a fresh 
supply of fuel; like hell, which is never satisfied. Avarice does not 
consist only in acquiring fresh riches with eagerness, but in greedily 
retaining what one already has. He who clings tenaciously to the 
property he has accumulated, is niggardly or penurious; he who 
grudges every little outlay, is a miser. We meet with covetous per- 
sons both among rich and poor. Among the wealthy one often finds 
money without avarice, and among the poor avarice without money. 
" The covetous is a worshipper of idols " (Eph. v. 5), for gold is his 
god. To this deity he devotes all his thoughts and all his care, all 
his efforts and aspirations, the sweat of his face; he even sacrifices 
to it his spiritual welfare and his eternal salvation. As the angels 
find their highest felicity in the contemplation of the Godhead, so 
the rich delight in nothing more than in handling and counting their 
money. How great a sin is this, which subjects us to the dominion 
of those things which were created for our service ! 

2. The avaricious are miserable both in time and in eternity; 
for the sake of money they commit all manner of sins, they lose 
the faith and their peace of mind, they are cruel to themselves 
and hardhearted to their neighbor, and finally perish eternally. 

The desire of money is the root of all evils (1 Tim. vi. 10). The 
devil hides behind money-bags as a snake conceals himself in a 
hedge; and he bites you with his venomous fangs when you greedily 
clutch at gold. He who accumulates riches and does not give to 
the poor is like a fount, which, if no water is drawn from it, 
becomes foul ; for a man's wealth will not benefit him if no portion of 
it is distributed to the needy. They that will become rich fall 
into temptation and into the snare of the devil, and into many un* 
profitable and hurtful desires, which drown men into destruction and 
perdition (1 Tim. vi. 9). For the sake of money the covetous fall 
into all manner of sins. " Such a one setteth even his own soul for 
sale" (Ecclus. x. 10). Greed of money fills the houses with thieves, 
the market with cheats, the law courts with perjurers, the eyes of 
the poor with tears, the prisons with criminals and hell with the 
reprobate. Eor money Judas betrayed his Lord and Master. Not 
until the Judgment Day will it be revealed how many lives have been 
sacrificed to this false god. The covetous love their faith. St. Leo 
the Great says that the greatest of all the evil arising from covetous- 
ness is the destruction of faith. The avaricious are so absorbed in 
the pursuit of material gain that they cannot give a thought to 
their spiritual welfare. You cannot serve God and mammon (Luke 
xvi. 13). A rich merchant lay on his death-bed, and a priest stood 
at his side, urging him to repentance. After setting before him the 
gravity of his state, the priest held up a silver crucifix before him. 
The dying man fixed his eyes upon it with a softened expression, 
and the priest rejoiced, thinking the man's heart was touched But 
no ; the only words that escaped his lips were these : " What do you 
consider that cross to be worth ? " The covetous loses his peace of 
mind; he lives in perpetual anxiety lest he should lose his wealth. 



The Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices, 497 

If riches increase, they are a burden to their owner ; if they decrease, 
they torture him. The covetous is cruel to himself; the miser 
grudges himself the necessaries of life; he often endures the greatest 
privations. " He consumes his own soul, drying it up " (Ecclus. xiv. 
9). He is like the oxen who carry the corn to the gamer, and them- 
selves feed on hay and straw. The justice of God often avenges on 
the miser the tears of the destitute by bringing him to poverty. 
The covetous is hardhearted towards his neighbor. He has no feel- 
ing for the suffering of others, he shows no compassion, he gives them 
no succor. His heart is as hard as the anvil, which is not softened by 
all the blows rained down upon it; for however great the need of his 
neighbor, the miser is never moved to pity. The covetous only think 
of what they can get from every one; as the shark devours all the 
fish that come in his way, so the covetous man ruins his neighbors. 
"He that gathereth together by wronging his own soul gathereth 
for others" (Ecclus. xiv. 4), who will squander his riches. The 
miser is an object of hatred to others. Calif as. King of Baby- 
lon, had stored a vast quantity of gold, silver, and precious stones in 
a tower ; when he refused to part with a portion of these for the bene- 
fit of his army, the soldiers shut him up in the tower, bidding him 
satisfy his hunger and quench his thirst with the treasures he had 
been so eager to amass. The covetous will be eternally damned. The 
Apostle includes them among those who will not possess the king- 
dom of heaven (1 Cor. vi. 10). Our Lord says: "It is easier for a 
camel to pass through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to 
enter the kingdom of heaven " (Matt. xix. 24) . It is a remarkable fact 
that the ancient poets identified Pluto, the god who reigned supreme 
in the infernal regions, with Plutus, the god of riches, as if to show 
that avarice leads to hell. The lover of money gets no good to him- 
self; he undertakes long journeys, he exposes himself to labor and 
perils for the sake of gain, and when death comes what has he of it 
all? For all his wealth he has nothing but a shroud, a few planks, 
and a few feet of earth; while he leaves his property to his smiling 
heirs, who ridicule the contemptible parsimony he practised. 

3. The surest means whereby the avaricious can conquer 
the greed of gain, is by forcing themselves to give alms. They 
ought besides to meditate frequently on the poverty of Christ, 
and the ephemeral nature of earthly possessions. 

Since the best method of correcting a vice is by exercising the 
opposite virtue, avarice will be cured by liberality. "What," asks 
St. Augustine, " can so effectually counteract avarice as the poverty 
of the Son of God? Consider, O miser, that thy Lord and thy God, 
Who came down to earth from heaven, would not possess any of the 
riches at which thou dost clutch so eagerly. He loved poverty and 
lived in poverty ; and, thinkest thou, ought a miserable mortal to de- 
sire ardently what the Lord of all creation despised ? " Remember 
also that we must part with all our earthly possessions at our death. 
We brought nothing into this world, and certainly we can carry 
nothing out (1 Tim. vi. 7). That which you leave behind at your 
death will pass into the hands of others, who will perchance make a 
bad use of it to their own damnation. " The most effectual medicine 



498 Good WorJcSy Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

for the disease of avarice," says St. Augustine, " is to think daily of 
death." True riches are not earthly possessions, but virtues ; pursue 
them (1 Tim. vi. 11), for they are treasures which thieves cannot steal 
or moth and rust corrupt. Why, then, busy one's self about the ac- 
quisition of evanescent treasures? 



9. TEMPERANCE IN EATING AND DRINKING, 

1. Temperance consists in not eating and drinking more tha?i 
is necessary, and not being either too greedy or too dainty in 
regard to the nourishment one takes. 

Temperance teaches us not to eat or drink more than is need- 
ful to support life. A sage of antiquity used to say ; " We do not live 
to eat, but we eat to live." One who is temperate does not fully sat- 
isfy his appetite, or take what is injurious to his health; he has reg- 
ular, fixed hours for his meals. He eats such things as are set before 
him (Luke x. 8), and is not angry when a dish is badly served. 
What concerns him most is to have food which suits his digestion 
and gives him strength for his work. 

2. Temperance is highly advantageous to soul and body; it 
improves the health, lengthens life, strengthens the faculties oi 
the mind, fosters virtue and leads to everlasting life. 

Moderation at table is advantageous both to body and soul and 
is the source of many virtues. We are travellers on earth, and we 
shall expedite our arrival in the celestial country, if we only make 
such use of the things of this world as is indispensable to enable us 
to proceed on our journey. 

3. Diligent meditation on the truths of our holy religion will 
assist us to form a habit of temperance. 

He who sustains his mind with spiritual aliments will not care 
greatly for the food of the body; for fleshly desires are suppressed 
when the love of celestial things fills the heart. As Our Lord said: 
" iNTot in bread alone doth man live," etc. Let us lift our eyes up to 
heaven, lest we should be allured by the baits of earth. Above all, 
think on the privations many of the poor endure, of the privations 
Our Lord endured. There are thousands of poor who think them- 
selves fortunate if they only have sufficient bread and water to still 
their hunger and quench their thirst. How kind God has been to 
you in giving to you so much more than to them, and how ungenerous 
it would be on your part, if you abused His liberality for the grati- 
fication of your palate. If He vouchsafed for your sake to feel the 
pangs of hunger, how much the more ought you to be abstemious for 
your own interest. 

10. INTEMPERANCE IN EATING AND DRINKING. 

1. Intemperance consists in eating and drinking much more 
than is necessary, and in being grcjedy or dainty in regard to 
one's food. 



The Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices. 499 

"Food ought to be looked upon as a medicine to sustain the 
body," says St. Augustine, and by no means made use of for the 
gratification of the palate. Intemperance is displayed by sump- 
tuous feasting (witness Dives); excess in drinking, e.g., Baltassar; 
greediness, e.g., Esau in regard to the pottage of lentils; daintiness, 
e.g., the Israelites in the wilderness, who longed for the flesh-pots of 
Egypt (Exod. xvi. 3). The glutton and the drunkard are more con- 
temptible than brute beasts, for the latter leave off eating when they 
have had enough, and the glutton does not do this. Those who eat with 
great avidity are like birds of prey, which in their voracity swoop 
down upon their victim the moment they decry it. Intemperance is 
productive of much harm. We must not forget that had the apple 
not been attractive to the appetite death would not have come upon 
the human race. 

2. By intemperance a man injures his health, weakens his 
mental faculties, destroys his reputation, and reduces himself to 
poverty; falls into vice, often comes to a miserable end, and is 
eternally lost. 

Intemperance destroys the health. The fire goes out when too 
much coal is heaped upon it, and the stomach is ruined when it is 
overloaded with food. Excess in drink is as prejudicial to the system 
as excessive rain is to agricultural districts. Dyspepsia, loss of appe- 
tite, dropsy, apoplexy, are the results of want of moderation in eating 
and drinking. Many lose their reason by indulgence in strong 
drinks, and end their days in a madhouse. By surfeiting many 
have perished (Ecclus. xxxvii. 34). Over-indulgence in the pleasures 
of the table has a bad effect on posterity. Physicians assert that 
there is an innate weakness in those that are the offspring of drunk- 
ards. Intemperance weakens the mental faculties. Intoxication ob- 
scures the mind as a fog obscures the sun. The intemperate cannot 
raise their hearts to God, any more than a bird that has gorged itself 
with food can soar aloft to the sky. Intemperance also weakens the 
will ; it renders us incapable of resisting temptation and avoiding sin, 
just as a ship too heavily laden cannot outride a storm. It also 
destroys a man's reputation; ^NToe, when drunk with wine, became an 
object of derision to his own son. Thus a man when in liquor makes 
a fool of himself, talks nonsense, and is mocked even by children. 
The Lacedemonians used to show druuken Helots to young people 
that they might learn to despise this degrading vice. Intemperance 
reduces men to poverty. The drunkard squanders in one day the 
wages earned by many days of work, and renders himself incapable 
of labor. " A workman that is a drunkard shall not be rich " (Ecclus. 
xix. 1). Intemperance leads to all kinds of sins, to immorality and 
godlessness As in a morass all manner of weeds grow rank, so evil 
lusts grow and flourish in an over-fed body. Those who eat and 
drink immoderately waste their money, feel disinclined to prayer at 
night^ on account of the inertia produced by excess, and in the 
morning because of headache and sensations of discomfort ; they miss 
Mass on Sundays, contract debts, live in discord with their families, 
and fall into sins of impurity. Eemember that Herod had been 
feasting when he caused John the Baptist to be beheaded ; Baltassar 
had been drinking deeply when he desecrated the sacred vessels of 



500 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

the sanctuary; the rich man in the Gospel who refused a morsel of 
bread to Lazarus fared sumptuously every day. Intemperance leads 
to uncleanness and godlessness; the glutton and drunkard forget 
their final end; they have no understanding for the truths of 
religion ; " the sensual man perceiveth not those things that are 
of the Spirit of God" (1 Cor. ii. 14). A sudden and miserable end 
often overtakes those who indulge in strong drink. Our Lord thus 
warns such persons : " Take heed to yourselves, lest perhaps your 
hearts be overcharged with surfeiting and drunkenness and the cares 
of this life, and that day come upon you suddenly" (Luke xxi. 34). 
As we live, so we die. Holofernes was asleep, exceedingly drunk, 
when Judith cut off his head (Judith xiii.) ; the voluptuous Baltassar 
was sleeping off the effect of his revels when the enemy made their 
way into the city (Dan. v.). The death of individuals who perish in 
this manner is all the more deplorable because they die unrepentant 
and without the last sacraments. Those who are addicted to excess 
seldom correct themselves; they may amend and abstain for a time, 
but too often they relapse into their former sins, and eternal perdi- 
tion is their fate. The rich man was buried in hell. Our Lord says : 
"Woe to you that are filled for you shall hunger" (Luke vi. 25). 
Drunkards shall not possess the kingdom of God (1 Cor. vi. 10). 
" He that soweth in his flesh, of the flesh also shall reap corruption " 
(Gal. vi. 8). Think of the flames of hell, and you will be able fully 
to subdue the impulses of nature. Eesolve never to omit a short 
prayer before and after meals ; to take what is set before you so as to 
check daintiness, and never to eat to satiety. 



11. CHASTITY. 

1. Chastity consists in preserving the mind and body free from 
everything that might stain their innocence. 

St. Stanislaus Kostka left the room instantly if a single objec- 
tionable word was uttered in his presence. St. Aloysius did the 
same. Many persons have given up all they had, even their life, in 
order to preserve the virtue of chastity; witness Joseph in Egypt, 
St. Agnes, St. Agatha, and other saints. Chastity is a superhuman 
perfection; it is divine in its origin, for God brought it to earth 
from heaven. Those who practise this virtue are like the lily (Cant. ii. 
1). Every tiny insect that rests upon the snowy petals of the lily 
mars its dazzling whiteness and disfigures its beauty; so the mere 
thought of evil is a stain upon the mind of the man who lives 
chastely. Rough handling spoils the fair lily and causes it to wither, 
so the man who lives chastely suffers from indiscriminate intercourse 
with those around him. The lily grows upright, straight and slender; 
so the man who lives chastely must ever look upwards and tend 
towards heaven. The lily fills the whole house with its fragrance^ 
so the man who lives chastely edifies all with whom he associates by 
his good example. 

Those who lead a chaste life resemble the angels and are 
most pleasing in God's sight. 



The Seven Principal Virtues a7id the Seven Principal Vices, 501 

Those whose life is pure are angels in human form. Chastity is 
an angelic virtue; by it men become like the angels. Chaste souls 
are in fact superior to the angels, because they have the flesh to 
combat, which the angels have not; they preserve angelic purity in 
spite of the continual temptations of the devil. What differentiates 
the angels from men is not their virtue, but their bliss. The purity 
of the angels is more blissful; that of man is stronger because it is 
the result of struggle. We learn from the lives of the saints that 
angels delight in the company of chaste mortals, thus proving that 
they regard them as their equals. The devils know that through 
chastity man recovers the angelic dignity which he lost, hence they 
strive assiduously to instil impure thoughts into his mind. Men 
who live chastely are extremely pleasing to God. Christ when on 
earth showed a predilection for chaste souls ; He chose a pure virgin 
for His Mother, a man of angelic purity for His foster-father; the 
Baptist, who was purified in his mother's womb, was His precursor; 
the chaste John was His favorite disciple, privileged at the Last 
Supper to rest upon His breast; at the foot of the cross two pure 
souls stood; and He loved little children because of their innocence. 
" He that loveth cleanness of heart shall have the King for his 
friend" (Prov. xxii. 11). God calls the chaste soul by the endearing 
title of friend, of sister, of spouse (Cant. iv. 6-8). The Son of God 
so delighted in virginity that He chose to be born of a virgin, and to 
give to man an example of it in His own person. The pure also 
enjoy the esteem of their fellow-men in a high degree. Even the 
heathen respected chastity. The Romans had their vestal virgins, 
who during their service in the temple, a period of thirty years, 
lived in celibacy. When they appeared in the streets, public honor 
was shown them, and if they chanced to meet a criminal on the way 
to execution, he was immediately pardoned. If pagans respected those 
of their daughters who preferred virginity to the married state, 
ought the Christian to look with contempt on the virgin who from 
supernatural motives does not marry ? " O how beautiful is the 
chaste generation with glory, for the memory of it is immortal: 
because it is known both with God and with men" (Wisd. iv. 1). 

2. Those who lead a life of chastity possess the sanctifying 
grace of the Holy Spirit in abundant measure ; they will be happy 
here on earth, and will enjoy special distinction in heaven here- 
after. 

Purity of heart is health to the soul; it also gives light to the 
understanding. The chaste are like a crystal without flaw, or a clear, 
gently-flowing stream, in which the face of heaven is mirrored. 
Purity of heart, interior brightness and angelic freedom aid to the 
attainment of wisdom ; it imparts knowledge to savants and teachers, 
to philosophers and theologians. It was through his spotless purity 
that St. John the Divine penetrated so deeply into the sublime mys- 
teries of the faith, that, in the commencement of his Gospel, he soared 
as on eagle's pinions, to gaze upon the Godhead. Purity enables a 
man to gaze undazzled upon the Sun of justice. It also endows the 
poul with heroic courage. Judith, a weak woman, displayed such 
heroism at the siege of Bethulia, that she went into the enemy's 
camp and beheaded Holofernes. Holy Scripture says of her, " For 



502 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice. 

thou hast done manfully and thy heart has been strengthened, be- 
cause thou hast loved chastity" (Judith xv. 11). The pure of heart 
easily acquire other virtues ; they are happy even in this world. Chas- 
tity possesses an indescribable attraction and intrinsic sweetness; 
it affords enjoyments far more delightful than sensual pleasures. 
Purity is also health to the body; virginal purity is an earnest and 
foretaste of the immortality of the glorified body. He who lives 
chastely generally enjoys better health and lives to an advanced 
age. Sometimes God in His wise providence withdraws pure souls 
from earth in their youth; if so, He takes them away lest wicked- 
ness should alter their understanding or deceit beguile their souls 
(Wisd. iv. 11). Those who lead a chaste life -.rill enjoy special dis- 
tinction in heaven. Virginal souls will be near to the throne of God ; 
they will stand around the Lamb and follow Him whithersoever He 
goeth. They will sing a new canticle that no man could say (Apoc. 
xiv.). God will crown the chaste souls (Cant. iv. 8), that is. He 
will confer upon them a special and singular glory. The chaste gen- 
eration triumpheth forever (Wisd. iv. 2). Virginal souls will have 
their portion with the Blessed Virgin. Even here on earth God 
chooses them as the recipients of His revelations, to them He dis- 
closes His secrets, to their petitions He turns a gracious ear. Queen 
Esther obtained from her royal consort all that she asked because 
of her fidelity and attachment to him; so the heavenly Spouse grants 
the petitions of all chaste souls. 

3. It is the bounden duty of every man to preserve chastity 
inviolate until he embraces the married state. 

This is enjoined by God in the Sixth Commandment of the 
Decalogue. Among the Jews a breach of chastity was punished by 
stoning (Dent. xxii. 21). The Romans buried alive any vestal virgin 
who violated the vow of virginity. See how severe a penalty the law 
of Jews and pagans inflicted upon those who outraged chastity ! 

4. The following means should be employed for the preser- 
vation of chastity: We should be temperate, accustom ourselves 
to exercise self-control, receive the sacraments frequently, pray 
devoutly to the Mother of God, love to meditate upon the truths 
of religion, especially upon the presence of God and the four 
last things; finally we should observe moderation in frequenting 
the ballroom and the theatre, and be guarded in our intercourse 
with persons of the opposite sex. 

St. Augustine declares that the preservation of chastity is the 
greatest victory achieved by the Christian, and requires the hardest 
struggle. The Fathers of the Church call it a martyrdom; a blood- 
less martyrdom, it is true, but not on that account the less sublime. 
For the martyr^s agony is short, and admits him immediately to 
celestial glory; whereas the safe-guarding of chastity demands a 
prolonged, a lifelong conflict. Self-control has been enlarged upon 
imder the head of the means of attaining perfection in general. 
We may particularize the necessity of bridling the tongue and ob- 
serving custody of the eyes. St. Augustine says that tattlers and 



The Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices. 503 

busy-bodies are in great danger of losing their purity. Death comes 
up into the soul through the window of the eyes (Jer. ix. 21). The 
lion is said to be tamed by blindfolding him ; so we can subdue our evil 
proclivities by strict custody of the eyes. Fasting is another aid to 
the preservation of purity; the flesh is tamed, just as animals are, 
by depriving them of food. " Be not drunk with wine," says the 
Apostle, "wherein is luxury" (Eph. v. 18). "Feasting fosters 
fleshly lusts," says St. Ambrose, " and wine heats the blood and in- 
flames the passions of young men." Prayer and the sacraments are 
means of grace without which it is impossible to conquer one^s self. 
" It is a mistake," says St. John Chrysostom, " to imagine that one 
can in one's own strength vanquish concupiscence and preserve 
purity; by God's mercy alone can the passions of nature be con- 
trolled." No man can otherwise be continent, unless God give it 
him (Wisd. viii. 21). Through confession and communion the will 
is strengthened and man is enabled to avoid sin. The Adorable 
Sacrament of the Altar is the corn of the elect, and a wine springing 
forth virgins (Zach. ix. 17). The wine of earth is prejudicial to 
purity, the wine of heaven produces purity. Devotion to the Mother 
of God is also most efficacious; to how many young people has it 
proved the means of maintaining themselves in innocence, like the 
angels! Segneri speaks of a dissolute youth whom a priest in the 
confessional told to recite three Ave Marias every morning in honor 
of the immaculate purity of Our Lady; after some years the young 
man returned to the priest, and informed him that to this practice 
he owed his complete conversion. Meditation upon the truths of 
religion destroys the taste for sensual pleasures. "Walk in the 
Spirit, and you shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh" (Gal. v. 16). 
Those who delight themselves in God care for no other joys; after 
tasting spiritual joys, those of earth are insipid and even abhorrent. 
He who remembers that God is present everywhere and sees everything 
will not do what is displeasing in His sight. Witness the conduct of 
Joseph (Gen. xxxix. 9), and Susanna (Dan. xiii. 35). Do not de- 
ceive yourself with the hope that your sin will remain hidden, 
for God is omnipresent, and from Him nothing can be con- 
cealed. "In all thy works remember thy last end and thou shalt 
never sin" (Ecclus. vii. 40). If the flame of impurity blazes up 
within you, think of the eternal fire, and that thought will quench it. 
St. Martinian, a hermit in Palestine, when tormented by temptations, 
thrust his feet into the fire ; and when he screamed with the pain, he 
asked himself, since he could not bear that feeble flame, how could he 
endure the everlasting burning of hell-fire? The subject of dancing 
and theatre-going has already been treated of. Unrestrained and 
familiar intercourse with persons of the opposite sex is to many a 
source of danger. Undue familiarity between young men and women 
is as likely to inflame the passions as straw is to blaze up when 
brought into contact with fire. One cannot be too careful in this re- 
spect. Love your own fireside. " If the candle is to be kept alight," 
says St. Thomas Aquinas, "it must be put into a lantern; so if you 
mean to live chastely, beware of going too much abroad." 



604 Good Works, Virtue, ISin, Vice, 



n, UNGEA8TITY. 

1. TTnchastity consists in thoughts, words, or deeds, which are 
destructive of innocence. 

If the chaste resemble the lily, the unchaste resemble a thorn- 
bush, which tears one to pieces. It was in order to expiate sins of 
impurity that the Kedeemer of the world suffered Himself to be 
cruelly scourged, and crowned with thorns. 

Unchaste persons are like the brute beasts; they are unlike 
God and displeasing to Him, and are regarded with contempt 
by man. 

Impurity degrades man to the level of the brute beast. The un- 
chaste prefer the gratification of their lusts to the joys of paradise. 
To them the words of the Psalmist may be applied : " Man when he 
was in honor did not understand ; he hath been compared to senseless 
beasts, and made like to them" (Ps. xlviii. 21). Pride is the sin of 
angels, avarice is the sin of man, and lasciviousness that of the brute. 
It is most degrading to humanity, which is brought so near to the 
Deity by the Incarnation of the Son of God, to be unduly subject to 
any dominion but that of God. By unchastity man loses his likeness 
to God. Through this sin man defiles the image of God in which 
he was created and commits a grievous offence against the Most 
High. It is because no other sin defiles a man as this does, that it 
is called by the name of impurity, or uncleanness. The unchaste 
are extremely displeasing to God. In primitive ages, when mankind 
fell into various sins, even that of idolatry, God bore with them 
patiently; but when they fell into impurity and sank even deeper in 
that vice, their wickedness was so abhorrent to Him, that it repented 
Him that He had made man upon the earth (Gen. vi. 6). St. Philip 
ISTeri possessed the gift of discerning the chaste from the unchaste 
by the sense of smell ; to the former a sweet odor attached, whereas 
the latter stunk in his nostrils. Those who violate their chastity are 
thus spoken of by the prophet Jeremias: "How is the gold become 
dim, the finest color is changed. The noble sons of Sion, they were 
clothed with the best gold, now they are esteemed as earthen vessels. 
They that were fed delicately have died in the streets " (Lam. iv. 
1, 2, 5). The unchaste lose the esteem of their fellow-men; "they 
are trodden upon as dung in the way" (Ecclus. ix. 10). 

2. Unchaste persons do not possess the sanctifying grace of the 
Holy Ghost, they are severely chastised by God in this life, and 
after death are condemned to eternal perdition. 

The indulgence of evil lusts is a bait the devil throws out, and 
those who swallow the alluring morsel are drawn by him to destruc- 
tion. The end of this sin is bitter as wormwood, and sharp as a two- 
edged sword (Prov. v. 4). St. Jerome declares that the fruits of this 
sin are more bitter than gall. Since the unchaste are without the 
light of the Holy Spirit, their understanding is completely darkened. 
When man descends to the level of the beasts, he loses that intelli- 



The Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices, 505 

gence which distinguishes him from the brute; he becomes like the 
horse and mule, which have no understanding (Ps. xxxi. 9). " The 
sensual man perceiveth not these things that are of the Spirit of 
God" (1 Cor. ii. 14). Through yielding to this sin, King Solomon 
lost his wisdom, and was so blinded by folly that he turned aside to 
follow the gods of the heathen (3 Kings xi.). The will is weakened 
by the sin of impurity; it creates a sort of paralysis in regard to 
good works, and thus amendment is rendered most difficult. The 
unchaste is a prisoner who has forged iron fetters for himself. Im- 
purity is a snare of the devil, and those who are caught in this net 
can hardly escape ever from its meshes. It leads moreover into many 
other sins : Jealousy, hatred, murder, etc. The terrible consequences 
of this sin are seen in the case of Henry VIIL; it was the cause of 
his rupture with Rome, and the apostasy of the English people. 
Unchastity is severely punished in this life; peace of mind is lost, 
the bodily health is impaired. " Every sin that a man doth is without 
the body, but he that committeth fornication, sinneth against his own 
body " (1 Cor. vi. 18). The voluptuary soon loses the bloom of youth, 
and becomes prematurely aged. Special chastisements, moreover, 
overtake those who violate chastity; the Deluge was sent on the 
earth on account of that sin (Gen. vi. Y), and the Lord rained down 
brimstone and fire upon Sodom and Gomorrha because the trans- 
gressions of the inhabitants in the same respect had become exceed- 
ingly grievous (Gen. xviii. 20). And if in the present day God does 
not visit impurity with the same condign punishment, it is because an 
infinitely fiercer fire, an infinitely more rigorous chastisement, is 
reserved for sinners of our own time. Fornicators, we are told, shall 
not possess the kingdom of God (1 Cor. vi. 9). "Neither fornicators 
nor unclean hath inheritance in the kingdom of Christ and of God " 
(Eph. V. 5). Of the heavenly Jerusalem it is said there shall not 
enter into it anything defiled (Apoc. xxi. 27). The soul of the for- 
nicator shall be taken away out of the number (Ecclus. xix. 3). If 
you live according to the flesh you shall die (Rom. viii. 13). The grat- 
ification is momentary, the penalty is eternal. 

3. The best means of avoiding the sin of impurity is flight. 

Remember how Joseph acted (Gen. xxxix.). There are other 
means of avoiding this sin, such as the reception of the sacraments, 
devotion to the Mother of God; yet the best of all is instant flight 
from temptation. The Apostle says that we ought to resist all temp- 
tations to sin, but from impurity he bids us flee — fly fornication (1 
Cor. vi. 18). In battling with sensual temptations cowards gain the 
victory; they seek safety in flight. 



IS. ZEAL IN WHAT IS GOOD. 

1. Zeal in what is good consists in working out one's salvation 
with all earnestness and fervor. 

Unless zeal springs from the love of God it is valueless. It must 
also be discreet, or it will do more harm than good. He whose zeal 
is without discretion is like a man who is gathering up the cockle 



506 Good Works, Virtue, Sin, Vice, 

in a field, roots up the wheat together with it (Matt. xiii. 29). Blind 
zeal is only pernicious. If Alexander the Great performed such 
great achievements for the sake of earthly renown, what ought not 
we to do, who aspire to eternal glory ! We ought each day so to serve 
God as if it were the first day of our consecration to His service. 
We should be like the merchant, who never thinks he has made 
enough money, but is continually on the watch for fresh gains; 
or like the traveller who does not look back upon the way he has trav- 
ersed but only onward to the goal before him. He who is zealous 
in what is good avails himself as far as he can of the means of grace 
the Church affords for his sanctification ; he is assiduous at prayer, 
he frequently approaches the sacraments, he listens attentively to the 
Word of God, and reads spiritual books. He neglects no opportunity 
of doing good works; he never refuses an alms to the poor man, he 
conscientiously observes the fasts of the Church, he devotes his free 
time to prayer. Moreover he who is zealous in what is good cheer- 
fully makes sacrifices for God ; he is glad when he is ridiculed or perse- 
cuted for his faith; he rejoices in the sufferings that come to him 
from God; he will give up anything rather than commit sin; he is 
even ready to lay down his life for Christ, if need be. He who is 
zealous in what is good exerts himself also for the salvation of others. 
He strives to deter his subordinates, his friends, his relatives, from 
sin; he admonishes them and prays for them; he prays besides for 
the conversion of heretics and sinners; how much the saints did in 
this way ! Zeal is like fire which spreads to all around, both far and 
near. 

2. Without zeal in what is good we cannot be saved, for the 
kingdom of heaven suffereth violence. 

Our Lord says: "!N"ot every one that saith to Me, Lord, Lord, 
shall enter into the kingdom of heaven" (Matt. vii. 21), and in 
another place He says : " The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, 
and the violent bear it away" (Matt. xi. 12). Of those who run in 
a race only he who perseveres will receive the prize (1 Cor. ix. 24). 
Let us not imagine that it is an easy matter to be saved. Eternal 
felicity is spoken of as a kingdom, the city of God, the house of God, 
paradise, a crown. All these things can only be acquired by a fierce 
battle, or for a large sum. Only those who have had a long training 
can obtain a high salary. Yet the kingdom of heaven is bought 
cheaply; the price paid for it comes infinitely short of its value. 
Without zeal and energy nothing good can be accomplished. God 
allows obstacles to be placed in the way of every good work, to test our 
will. E'o good work can be performed without some sacrifice ; no vir- 
tue can be gained without a struggle. " The greater violence thou 
offerest to thyself, the greater progress thou wilt make " (Imitation, 
Book 1, ch. 25). We cannot expect our prayers to be heard, unless 
we persevere in spite of all hindrances. Remember the example of St. 
Monica, and the blind man by the wayside (Luke xviii. 35). 



The Seven Principal Virtues and the Seven Principal Vices* 507 



U, THE OPPOSITE OP ZEAL : SLOTH. 

1. Sloth consists in shunning everything that conduces either 
to our temporal or eternal well-being, provided it be toilsome. 

Sloth displays itself either by indolence, dislike of work, and 
the non-fulfihnent even of the duties of one's calling; or by tepidity 
in and indifference to what is good and conducive to one's spiritual 
welfare. The slothful man displays distaste for all good works. We 
find life and movement and activity in all nature ; the celestial hosts 
laud and magnify the Most High continually; the heavenly 
bodies revolve unceasingly in space; trees and herbs grow to their 
appointed size ; the tiny ant lays up a store in summer, the busy bees 
make honey and do not suffer drones to live; and shall man alone 
be an idler, an exception to all creatures whom instinct teaches to 
abhor idleness ? " Go to the ant, O sluggard, and consider her ways " 
(Prov. vi. 6). The indolent postpone all work to a future day, and 
only pursue sensual pleasures. To-morrow, to-morrow, not to-day, is 
their cry. The lukewarm Christian wills and does not will ; he would 
fain have the wages God gives, but he will not work for Him; as 
soon as it is a question of putting force upon himself he shrinks 
back. Yet the slothful think they do more than others, for while the 
fervent look at those who do better than themselves, to learn humil- 
ity, they on the contrary look at the good, not in others but in them- 
selves. Hence the slothful never attain perfection. Great sinners 
have been known to become great saints, but the lukewarm never. 

2. Idleness leads to all kinds of vice ; it brings misery in this 
life and eternal damnation in the life to come. 

Idleness hath taught much evil (Ecclus. xxxiii. 29) ; it is in fact 
the source of every evil habit. Man is like the earth: if a field be 
not sown with good seed, a crop of weeds spring up and grow apace; 
so if man has no useful occupation, his natural activity turns to all 
manner of mischief. Iron rusts when it is not used; water when 
stagnant becomes foul; and man, corrupted by idleness, becomes the 
abode of evil passions, and falls into manifold temptations. The 
busy man is assailed by one demon, the unemployed by a hundred. 
Idleness ruins the young, for it destroys all that is good in them. 
The man who does nothing all day long is like the trunk of a tree, 
without foliage and without fruit. Idleness brings misery in this 
life. Holy Scripture says of the slothful : " Want shall come upon 
thee and poverty" (Prov. vi. 11). St. John Chrysostom declares 
idleness to be the parent of poverty and the root of despair. It also 
brings a man to eternal damnation. Idleness is in itself a sin. A 
servant may not steal, or drink, or be insolent; but if he has the 
fault of being lazy, his master will dismiss him from his service. God 
acts in the same manner. " Every tree that bringeth not forth good 
fruit shall be cut down and cast into the fire" (Matt. vii. 19). The 
servant who refuses to trade with the talents his lord has confided to 
him, shall be cast into the exterior darkness; there shall be weeping 
and gnashing of teeth (Matt. xxv. 30). The idler cannot indeed hope 
that heaven will be his portion, for Our Lord says : " Call the laborers 



508 Good Works y Virtue y Sin, Vice, 

and give them their hire." God does not love those who love their 
own ease. He expressly states that those who are lukewarm, neither 
cold nor hot. He will vomit out of His mouth (Apoc. iii. 16), that is 
to say, He is disgusted with them. Our God is a consuming fire, 
and He delights in the adoration of the seraphim, who are inflamed 
with burning love. An open unbeliever is less abhorrent to Him 
than a tepid Christian. 

3. Those who are inclined to indolence should think fre- 
quently of the reward, both temporal and eternal, of industry, 
and thus they will overcome their distaste for work. 

" Look not, O Christian," says St. Augustine, " on the labor that it 
costs thee; look rather to the rest and the joys which God promises 
thee ; see how infinitely they outweigh all thy toil." " In doing good 
let us not fail; for in due time we shall reap, not failing" (Gal. 
vi. 9). 



C. CHRISTIAN PERFECTION. 



I. THE ASPIRATION AFTER CHRISTIAN PERFECTION. 

No builder leaves an edifice half-finished. If he has begun to 
construct a house, he does not rest until it is completed. An artist 
does not hand in the portrait he has painted until every feature is 
faithfully delineated. Let the Christian do likewise; when once he 
has undertaken the work of his own sanctification, and is in a state 
of grace, let him strive to bring the edifice of virtue to completion, 
and form himself to a true image of God. Our aim should be to 
make progress every day. 

1. God requires of all the just that they should aspire to Chris- 
tian perfection. 

God desires the sinner to be converted, the just to strive after 
perfection. The duty of aspiring after perfection is included in the 
precept of charity, for it requires us to love God with all our strength. 
And what else does that mean but continual advancement in the 
path of virtue? "He that is just let him be justified still, and he 
that is holy let him be sanctified still" (Apoc. xxii. 11). Our Lord 
lays this injunction upon us : " Be you therefore perfect, as also 
your heavenly Father is perfect" (Matt. v. 48). The will of God 
is none other than our sanctification. He who does not aim at the 
attainment of Christian perfection, is in danger of losing his soul. 
The vessel that does not stem the stream will drift downwards. 
Where there is no progression there is retrogression; no man can 
stand still on the path of virtue. " As soon," says St. Augustine, 
" as thou art content with thyself, and thinkost thou hast done enough, 
thou art lost." We should aim at the highest degree of sanctity, 
imitating the trader, who is wont to ask the highest possible price 
for his wares. 

2. The most sublime example of Christian perfection is found 
in Our Lord. After Him, the saints are also patterns of perfection. 

Christ says: "I am the way, the truth and the life" (John xiv. 
6). When the rich youth asked Our Lord what he was to do in order 
to be perfect, the answer given him was : " Follow Me " (Matt. xix. 

509 



510 Christian Perfection, 

21). St. Paul bids us : " Put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ " (Rom. 
xiii. 14). As an apprentice watches his master at work, that he may- 
learn to work like him, so we ought to keep our eyes fixed on our 
Master Christ. The saints meditated unceasingly on the life and 
Passion of Our Lord. He is the Christian's pattern. The saints are 
also examples of perfection, for they imitate Christ; their life is a 
copy of His life. St. Paul exhorts the Corinthians : " Be ye followers 
of me" (1 Cor. iv. 10), and he enjoins on the Hebrews the necessity 
of imitating the saints (Heb. vi. 12). The Church commemorates 
one or more of the saints on each day of the ecclesiastical year, in 
order to incite us to their imitation. The saints stand in the same 
relation to Christ as the stars do to the sun; He surpasses them all 
in perfection. Thus it is easier for us to imitate the saints ; we know 
that it is impossible for us ever to attain to the perfection of which 
Christ sets us the example, but the sanctity of the saints is within 
our reach. And here it must be remarked that almost every saint 
excelled in the practice of one particular virtue. Also that the ac- 
tions of each were suited to and in conformity with the circum- 
stances, the environment in which they were placed; e.g., their call- 
ing, their means, their bodily strength and natural temperament. 
Every one ought to choose for his model a saint whose position and 
calling were similar to his own. 

3. The perfection of the Christian consists in charity towards 
God and his neighbor, and in detachment of heart from the things 
of this world. 

"Love is the fulfilling of the law" (Rom. xiii. 10). Charity is 
the bond of perfection (Col. iii. 14). St. Augustine, when asked how 
sanctity of life was to be attained, answered : " Love God, and do as 
thou wilt ; " meaning that he who truly loves God will do nothing 
that displeases Him. St. Francis of Sales says that the only true 
perfection is to love God with our whole heart and our neighbor as 
ourselves; all other perfection is spurious. St. Thomas Aquinas 
defines sanctity as the fervent surrender of one's self to God. Sanc- 
tity does not consist in the outward observances of religion, in long 
prayers, in fasting and almsgiving ; these are but means to its attain- 
ment. Nor does sanctity consist in complete freedom from sin; it is 
evinced rather by constant and energetic resistance to sin. For God 
frequently permits even saints to fall into sin to keep them humble. 
Least of all does sanctity consist in extraordinary works, which the 
world regards with astonishment and admiration. We do not read 
of the Mother of God ever having performed extraordinary works, 
or St. Joseph, the foster-father of Christ. In the ranks of the saints 
a great number will be found who never shone in the sight of the 
world; their life was hid with Christ in God (Col. iii. 3). The love 
Ox God is always accompanied by hatred of the world, abhorrence of 
its sinful, sensual delights. If any man love the world, the charity 
of the Father is not in Him (1 John ii. 15). The love of God and the 
love of the world are like the scales of a balance; as one rises the 
other falls. As charity increases in the heart sinful affections die 
out. As one who would climb to the top of a tower must ascend the 
steps that lead to it, so if we would reach the summit of perfection, 
we must detach our hearts as completely as possible from earthly 



The Aspiration after Christian Perfection, 511 

things. The greater our hatred of the world, and our proportionate 
charity towards God and our neighbor, the greater the degree of per- 
fection we have attained. 

4. He who makes Christian perfection his aim will attain it 
surely but slowly. 

Our Lord says: "Blessed are they that himger and thirst after 
justice for they shall have their fill" (Matt. v. 6). A sincere desire 
for perfection and an untiring effort to attain it will not be unsuc- 
cessful. The desire for it is already half the battle ; for an energetic 
desire gives force and courage, makes labor light, daunts the enemy, 
makes a man pleasing to God and obtains grace. On St. Thomas 
Aquinas being asked how one could make sure of attaining sanctity, 
he replied : " By a resolute will." No one has ever attained sanctity 
without fervently desiring it, any more than proficiency in an art or 
science has ever been acquired by one whose wishes were not eagerly 
set upon it. But progress towards Christian perfection is very slow. 
Our sanctification is not the work of a single day. ~^o one, unless 
he be peculiarly privileged by God, can reach perfection in a short 
time. It is the same in the spiritual as in the natural order : A plant 
does not spring up and blossom in a night, the infant does not grow 
to man's estate in a single day. The process of healing is a slow one ; 
indeed the slower the surer. So it is with our sanctification. There are 
three degrees in the way of perfection; that of the beginners, who 
still retain a strong affection for mortal sin; that of the advanced, 
who cannot abstain from venial sin, and who, because of attachment 
to earthly things, are still in a state of warfare; and the perfect, 
whose heart is completely detached from earth and given to God, 
and who consequently are entirely at peace within themselves. These 
three degrees are also known as the purgative, the illuminative, and 
the unitive way. They correspond in the supernatural life to the three 
stages of man's natural life; childhood, the period of mental and 
physical weakness ; adolescence, the period of development ; and man- 
hood, the period of maturity. St. Ignatius enjoins upon beginners 
meditation on the four last things ; on the advanced, consideration of 
the Passion of Our Lord ; on the perfect, contemplation of the divine 
goodness and of celestial joys. There is no end to the way of perfec- 
tion, for the love of God is without limit. " He who is just, let him 
be justified still, and he that is holy, let him be sanctified still" 
(Apoc. xxii. 11). It is, however, within the power of man to approach 
very near, while still on earth, to the state of the blessed in heaven. 

5. There is no state or calling of life in which Christian per- 
fbction is not possible. 

Saints are formed in evei-y class, from the highest to the lowest 
To love God and one's neighbor is within every one's power. " How 
easy a thing it is," says St. Bonaventure, "to love God: there is 
nothing laborious, nothing disagreeable involved in it." In fact 
nothing is more delightful to the heart than to love God. From 
other good works a man may excuse himself, saying: "I cannot 
fast; I have not the means to give alms;" but no one can say: "I 
cannot love." Pious practices must be proportioned to the powers 
and adapted to the occupations and duties of the individual. St. 



512 Christian Perfection* 

Francis of Sales compares piety to a fluid, which takes the shape of 
the vessel in which it is contained. 



II. GEKEKAL MEANS FOR THE ATTAINMENT OF 
PERFECTION. 

In order to make sure of attaining Christian perfection, the 
following means should be adopted. 

1. Fidelity in small things. 

By this greater graces are obtained and grave sins more 
easily avoided. 

In the natural order we see how great things are evolved out of 
what is apparently insignificant. How small the acorn is, and yet it 
contains the germ of a mighty oak! So it is in the spiritual order. 
Pay heed, therefore, to small things; do not despise even the least; 
be careful to avoid every untrue word, every word that may give 
offence; never utter lightly the name of God. To him who is faith- 
ful in small things God gives great graces; to him Our Lord says: 
" Well done, good and faithful servant ; because thou hast been 
faithful over a few things, I will place thee over many things" 
(Matt. XXV. 21). He who, on the other hand, is unfaithful in small 
things, loses many graces and is punished by God. Moses was not 
permitted to enter the Promised Land because he doubted God's 
promise, and Zacharias was struck dumb for his incredulity. Many 
of the saints were deprived of consolations, and visited by aridity, 
because of slight faults. He who is faithful in small things is not 
as likely to fall into heinous sins; for Our Lord says: "He that is 
faithful in that which is least is faithful also in that which is 
greater; and he that is unjust in that which is little, is unjust also in 
that which is greater" (Luke xvi. 10). Hence whosoever is attentive 
to small things makes rapid progress in virtue. "If thou wouldst 
become great," says St. Augustine, " begin with that which is little." 
Grains of sand form a mountain, a number of trees make a forest. 
" He that contemneth small things shall fall by little and little " 
(Ecclus. xix. 1). Little infidelities to grace often cause great mis- 
chief, and embitter a man's whole life. A spark will occasion a vast 
conflagration, and a small leak will cause a ship to founder. So it 
is with small sins. Judas began with purloining, and ended by be- 
coming a traitor and a suicide; Cain first gave way to jealousy and 
then slew his brother. Contempt of trifles shows secret pride. 

2. A habit of self-control. 

We should not encourage curiosity, nor stare out of windows; 
we should avoid useless or loud talking, refrain from complaining 
of the weather or of our health; from eating between our meals, 
from finding fault with what is provided for us, from too long indul- 
gence in sleep, from eagerness to join in conversation, from speaking 
of ourselves, from contradicting others. These and similar acts of 
mortification cost no great effort. The saints practised far more 
severe ones, but in this they are not to be imitated by all, St. John the 
Baptist led a life of extreme self-denial. St. Paul says of himself: 



General Means for the Attamment of Perfection. 513 

^' I chastise my body and bring it into subjection ; lest perhaps when 
I have preached to others, I myself should become a castaway" 
(1 Cor. ix. 27). Self-control is a sort of abstinence; it is far more 
profitable than merely abstaining from food. He who can rule him- 
self is a king; for instead of being led captive by his passions, he 
dominates them. Self-conquest is the mark of a true Christian. 
Our Lord says: "If any man will follow Me, let him deny him- 
self " (Mark viii. 34) ; that is to say, he that will be My disciple 
must practise self-abnegation. St. Paul also says : " They that are 
Christ's have crucified their flesh with the vices and concupiscences " 
(Gal. V. 24). A fish that is alive swims against the current; a dead 
one is carried along by it. Hence you can easily ascertain whether 
you have the life of the Spirit in you, or whether you are dead ; ask 
yourself whether you stem the tide of your sinful desires, or if you 
are carried away by it. 

Bj the practice of self-control the understanding is en- 
lightened, the will strengthened, and the soul finds peace. 

" We have a law in our members fighting against the law of 
our mind" (Rom. vii. 23). Our members that are upon the earth 
must accordingly be mortified (Col. iii. 5). The flesh is continually 
at war with the spirit, and we must continually be at warfare with 
the flesh. He who does all that is allowed, will soon proceed to do 
what is not allowed (St. Augustine). But if we deny ourselves what 
is lawful, it will be easy for us to abstain from what is unlawful. 
The most perfect among us will fall into sin if he ceases to practise 
self-denial, as a field that is uncultivated produces a crop of weeds. 
Self-control enlightens the understanding. All that we deny to our 
carnal senses is repaid a hundredfold to our spiritual senses. "Let 
us," says St. Basil, " stifle our fleshly desires, in order that our spir- 
itual sense may become keener, and our interior vitality and peace 
be augmented." Self-control fortifies the will. If the will be strong, 
carnal impulses are quickly subdued, and the temptations of the devil 
easily overcome. Mortify yourself in matters that are apparently of 
little moment; you will thereby learn to conquer where great things 
are at stake. The mortified man is like an oak, which will break, but 
will not bend; the unmortified is like a reed, shaken with the wind 
(Matt. xi. 7). By self-control we acquire true peace of mind. There 
is no quiet in a house the door of which stands open to all comers, and 
there is no peace in the soul if the senses are not kept in custody. 
Our disorderly affections are like a storm at sea ; they raise a tempest 
in the soul and perturb the mind. But if you know how to command 
the winds of passion, a marvellous peace and great calm will ensue. 
He who for the love of God has renounced all carnal lusts will enjoy 
the sweetest consolations of the Holy Spirit. He who is master of 
himself will not easily be provoked to wrath. Self-control is the 
parent of meekness and patience. 

3. Abstinence from all that is snperflnous, especially in regard 
to eating and drinking. 

Among superfluities we reckon splendid dress, costly furniture, 
theatre-going, giving and taking part in entertainments, banquets, etc. 
Those who take great delight in such things will never attain perfec- 



514 Christian Perfection, 

tion; the Holy Ghost will not dwell in a heart that is filled with tne 
love of earthly things. He who would enter upon the path of virtue 
and perfection must begin by diligent mortification of his appetite. 
No gourmand can be a good soldier of Christ. Those who eat and 
drink more than is necessary are in danger of losing grace and suc- 
cumbing to temptation. Hence Our Lord says : " Woe to you that 
are filled" (Luke vi. 26). And St. Peter exhorts the faithful thus: 
" Be sober and watch ; because your adversary the devil as a roaring 
lion goeth about, seeking whom he may devour" (1 Pet. v. 8). 
Talkativeness is also to be avoided. An unrestrained tongue is a 
sign of conceit and folly. As a doctor judges of a man's bodily health 
by the state of his tongue, so one may judge of the health of the soul 
by the words the tongue utters. From the ring of a vessel one can 
perceive whether it is full or empty; so by the conversation of a 
man it may be seen whether his mind is empty or well-stored. He 
that setteth bounds to his tongue is knowing and wise ; a fool multi- 
plieth words. The temperature of a room is speedily reduced if the 
door be left open; so the love of God cools in the heart of one whose 
lips are ever unclosed for idle gossip, and the sanctifying grace of 
the Holy Spirit departs from the soul. Incontinence of speech is a 
fruitful source of contention. " If any man offend not in tongue, the 
same is a perfect man" (Jas. iii. 2). Mortification of the tongue 
is indispensable to the attainment of sanctity. "If any man bridle 
not his tongue, that man's religion is vain" (Jas. i. 26), even 
though he seem to be God-fearing. "He that hath no guard on his 
speech shall meet with evils" (Pro v. xiii. 3). For this reason St. 
Paul bids us: "Shun profane and vain babblings" (2 Tim. ii. 16). 
Speech is silver; silence is gold. Yet we must beware of being too 
chary with our words, or our silence might appear contemptuous. In 
this as in all else, a wise mediima should be observed. 

4. Order and regularity. 

For this is conducive to peace of mind and rapid advance- 
ment in sanctity. 

" Let all things be done decently and according to order " (1 Cor. 
xiv. 40). It is well to have a fixed time for rising and retiring to 
rest, for meals, for work, for recreation, etc. We should endeavor to 
keep order in all around us, for thus we shall save much time and 
trouble. St. Augustine says that order leads to God, for all that He 
ordains is regulated in perfect order. Behold the beautiful order 
that reigns in the starry firmament. Order must be maintained in 
all institutions, schools, convents, etc. It is remarkable how many 
men who have had military training have reached an eminent degree 
of sanctity. 

5. TJnremitting prayer. 

By this means many temptations are held aloof, and graces 
in abundant measure obtained. 

As fortifications defend a garrison against the attacks of the 
enemy, so prayer without ceasing protects us from the devil. Our 
Lord admonishes us : " Watch and pray, that ye enter not into tempta- 



General Means for the Attainment of Perfection, 515 

tion" (Matt. xxvi. 41). St. Paul bids the faithful: "Pray without 
ceasing" (1 Thess. v. 17). Unremitting prayer is a sure means of 
drawing down the Holy Ghost from on high. The more a plant en- 
joys the sunshine, the better it will grow and the more luxuriantly 
will it blossom; in like manner the more often the soul draws near 
in prayer to the sun of divine grace, the greater will be its increase 
in perfection. All the saints were instant in prayer. Blessed Clement 
Hofbauer was accustomed to recite the Rosary while walking through 
the streets of Vienna. St. Alphonsus used to say that the saints 
owed their sanctity more to their prayers than to their works. Habitu- 
ate yourself to ejaculatory prayer; it will refresh you and help you on 
your way as an occasional draught of wine does the traveller. 

6. Frequent confession and communion. 

Sins once properly confessed, are, it is true, forgiven; yet 
it is advisable, though not obligatory upon us, to accuse ourselves 
of them repeatedly. 

The saints used to confess again and again the mortal sins of 
which they had been guilty. The confession of the sins of our past 
life serves to keep us humble. And if, after confession, we frequently 
approach the holy table, we shall increase in perfection, as a tree 
which is planted near running waters grows to great height. We 
admire the sanctity of the early Christians ; let us remember that they 
communicated daily. It is said of them that they persevered in the 
communication of the breaking of bread (Acts ii. 42). 

7. Reading attentively the life of Our Lord and the lives of 
the saints, and meditation on the truths of religion. 

By reading the lives of the saints we shall feel ourselves power- 
fully incited to imitate their example. We shall ask ourselves, as 
St. Augustine asked himself : " If these and those could do so much, 
wherefore canst not thou do the same ? " The saints loved to study 
the lives of the saints and to imitate them; so a draughtsman looks 
long and often at the picture he is about to copy. However, we must 
not imagine that with our love of God, so poor, so faint, we can all 
at once imitate the sublime actions of the saints, or it will be as if a 
crow were to attempt to imitate the song of the nightingale. The 
most profitable plan is for us to read the life of a saint whose position 
corresponded to our own, and learn from it practical lessons. The 
lives of the saints are the maxims of the Gospel put in practice. 
Meditation on the truths of religion is supremely useful ; it enlightens 
cur understanding, stimulates the will to the pursuit of what is good, 
and gives us peace of mind. The truths of religion are like a fire, 
standing near which we receive light and warmth. They impart 
nourishment to our souls; they are a food that satisfies. Remember 
Our Lord's words to the Samaritan woman (John iv. 13). The world 
would not be as bad as it is if there were not so few who consider 
the truths of religion in their heart (Jer. xii. 11). Through medita- 
tion the saints attained sanctity. 

8. Love of solitude. 

In solitude we obtain many actual graces ; we are preserved 
from temptation and from sin, and grow in virtue. 



516 Christian Perfection.^ 

Our Lord was wont to take Himself to solitary places, to a moun- 
tain (John vi. 15), to the desert (Luke v. 16), or the Mount of Olives 
(John viii. 1), where He spent a long time in prayer. Until He was 
thirty years of age He led a hidden life. We know also that many 
holy men withdrew into solitude and devoted themselves to spiritual 
exercises. St. Benedict passed three years in a cavern among the 
mountains. St. Ignatius of Loyola dwelt for a considerable time in 
the cave of Manresa. Those who are now unknown, whose life is hid 
with Christ in God, will one day appear with Him in glory (Col. iii. 
3, 4). St. John Chrysostom says the life of the recluse is that of an 
angel upon earth. In solitude we obtain many graces ; there the Holy 
Spirit speaks to the heart (Osee ii. 14). One cannot hear a sweet 
melody in the midst of din and tumult ; God's voice can only be heard 
by those who flee from the world. The further the soul lives from all 
worldly tumult, the more familiar does she become with her Creator 
(Imitation, Book 1, ch. 20). In solitude alone is true contentment to 
be found. Were the recluse to leave his cell, he would perceive that 
the world is a field in which more vexation than pleasure is to be 
reaped. Solitude is a preservative from temptation and sin, as the 
harbor shelters the mariner from storm and shipwreck. While Adam 
was alone he did not sin; it was after he had Eve for a companion. 
The sage Seneca used to say : " As often as I have been among men, 
I have returned less a man." Solitude helps to maintain and increase 
virtue. Choice spices only retain their aroma when shut up; they 
lose it if exposed to the air. Virtue is more easily preserved in soli- 
tude than amid the noise and bustle of the world. He who frequents 
the drinking saloon, who goes to every place of amusement, who, in a 
a word, enjoys life, will not enjoy true peace of heart, will not attain 
perfection. But however great the advantages of seclusion, we must 
not be unsociable, and withdraw altogether from the society of our 
fellow-men; we must mix with them freely whenever duty bids, or 
charity calls upon us to do so. Our Blessed Lady visited her cousin 
Elizabeth, to congratulate her. Let us hold aloof from the world in 
spirit, not in bodily presence. 



IIL SPECIAL MEANS EOE THE ATTAINMENT OF 
PEKFECTION. 

1. He who aspires to a higher degree of perfection must follow 
the three evangelical counsels : Perfect obedience, |)erpetual chas- 
tity, and voluntary poverty. 

These three virtues are called counsels because they were not en- 
joined upon us by Our Lord as a command, but as a counsel. There 
is no sin incurred in not following them. It befits the law of the New 
Testament to contain counsels as well as precepts, for in it God makes 
Himself the Friend of man, and in this character He does not com- 
mand but commend. The New Law is a law of liberty, the Old Law 
was one of servitude. By following the evangelical counsels we offer 
an oblation to God of our will, our body, our property. They are 
the three arms of the cross on which we are crucified with Christ. To 
follow them is a lifeloiur martvrdom; a martyrdom less terrible than 



Special Means for the Attainment of Perfection. 617 

that of the sword, but more painful because of its duration. Those 
who follow these counsels will attain a higher degree of glory. That 
which is done voluntarily, not under compulsion, deserves a greater 
reward. 

1. Perfect obedience consists in the complete subjection of 
one's will to that of a superior. 

Christian obedience, that is, obedience to the ecclesiastical and 
secular authorities, is binding upon every man. But this obligation 
does not extend to all our actions ; it leaves us free in many respects. 
For instance, the spiritual authority requires us to hear Mass on 
Sundays and holydaj^s, to approach the sacraments at Easter, etc.; 
but it leaves us at liberty to fulfil our duty in what church and at 
what hour we please. Perfect obedience, on the contrary, requires 
us to obey in everything. This voluntary obedience is the greatest 
sacrifice we can make for God; if we fast, give alms, or sacrifice our 
reputation for God's sake, we give to God only a part of ourselves. 
But he who sacrifices his will has nothing more to give ; he immolates 
himself to God. Obedience to a superior is neither irrational nor 
degrading to man, for he subjects himself voluntarily once and for- 
ever to the will of one who is placed over him by the will of almighty- 
God; he is like a traveller who unquestioningly proceeds in the di- 
rection to which the signpost points. It is a difficult matter to know 
one's self, but it is easy for another to know and guide one. 

2. Lifelong chastity consists in abstaining from marriage 
and from all unclean desires. 

The Sixth Commandment of the Decalogue obliges every one to 
subdue his evil concupiscences. This counsel requires those who 
follow it to abstain from wedlock; they lead on earth an angel's life. 
In fact in this respect man surpasses the angels in excellence, for 
the latter have no carnal impulses to combat. The Council of Trent (C. 
24, 10), declares the single state to be higher than the married state; 
it is therefore better to be unmarried (1 Cor. vii. 38). The reason 
of this is because conjugal intercourse fosters man's lower nature, and 
the care of providing for a family engrosses him in material interests. 

3. Voluntary poverty consists in the renunciation of all 
earthly possessions. 

To give of one's own to the needy is the bounden duty of all. 
But it is an immeasurably greater sacrifice if, for the love of God, 
we renounce all earthly possessions and voluntarily embrace poverty, 
to which so many haiHships are attached. The voluntary poverty 
of the Christian bears no resemblance to the voluntary poverty of 
the pagan philosophers. The latter despised riches from earthly con- 
siderations; they wished to be quit of the cares attending them. 
The Christian on the other hand makes himself poor in order to 
serve God better, and thus attain more surely to the possession of 
eternal treasures. There is, besides, involuntary poverty, when a man 
is destitute, or in straitened circumstances. Again there is poverty 
of spirit, which is required of all men; it consists in acknowledging 
that whatever wealth, distinctions, or learning we may possess, we 



518 Christian Perfection. 

are poor in the sight of God. But now we are speaking of volun- 
tary poverty; he who is poor for Christ's sake is exceeding rich (St. 
Jerome) . 

2. These three counsels are called the evangelical counsels ; be- 
cause Our Lord gave them to us when He preached the Gospel, and 
followed them Himself. 

Our Lord counselled perfect obedience in His conversation 
with the rich jonng man; perpetual chastity in His discourse 
on the indissolubility of marriage; voluntary poverty in the 
afore-mentioned conversation with the rich young man. 

We read that Christ said to the rich young man : " Come and 
follow Me " (Matt. xix. 21) ; i.e., come and let your conduct be 
guided by Me completely. This is perfect obedience. And when 
He was speaking about the indissolubility of marriage. He said that 
there were some who remained unmarried for the kingdom of heaven's 
sake; adding: " He that can take it let him take it" (Matt. xix. 12). 
By these words He counselled perpetual chastity. Finally He said 
to the young man : " If thou will be perfect, go, sell what thou hast 
and give to the poor" (Matt. xix. 21). This was voluntary poverty. 

Our Lord Himself practised the counsels; for He sought 
not His own will but did the will of Him that sent Him (John 
V. 30). He led a life of celibacy and extreme poverty. 

The poverty of Christ was perfect ; He chose a stable for His birth- 
place, a poor virgin for His Mother, a lowly artisan for His foster- 
father; He had nowhere to lay His head (Matt. viii. 20). 

3. The evangelical counsels lead to higher perfection, because 
by their means the three evil concupiscences in man are completely 
destroyed and the chief obstacles in the way of his salvation are 
removed. 

In following the evangelical counsels, we do not combat this or 
that evil tendency; we tear up all bad passions by the root, and lay 
a solid foundation for the edifice of virtue. All sins spring from 
the threefold concupiscence : The concupiscence of the eyes, the con- 
cupiscence of the flesh, and the pride of life ; i.e., the inordinate long- 
ing for riches, for sensual gratifications, and for honor (1 John ii. 16). 
As in medicine some remedies are drastic and others mild, so it is 
with the remedies for these evil concupiscences. Prayer is a cure for 
pride, fasting for sensuality, almsgiving for avarice; these are mild 
remedies. But let him who desires a radical cure adopt the three 
evangelical counsels. By obedience pride will be thoroughly sub- 
dued: concupiscence of the flesh by chastity, concupiscence of the 
eyes by poverty. The counsels are a means of removing the chief 
obstacles in the way of our salvation. By following them we shake 
off the fetters of earth, and thus advance more swiftly towards our 
final end. That earthly possessions are a formidable hindrance to 
those who would follow Christ, we gather from the story of the rich 
young, man (Matt. xix.). Socrates compares riches to a long robe, 



Special Means for the Attainment of Perfection. 619 

which prevents one from walking quickly because one's feet get en- 
tangled in it. The traveller proceeds on his way much more rapidly 
if he has nothing to carry. What is said about riches is equally true 
in reference to wedlock. He that is married is solicitous for the 
things of the world, that he may please men; he that is unmarried 
is solicitous for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may 
please God (1 Cor. vii. 32). He who is detached from earthly things 
can fix his eyes on heaven and contemplate the Sun of justice with 
unclouded vision, and gain a more profound knowledge of divine 
things. Let no one say that the wealthy can do more good to his 
fellow-men, and gain more merit, than one who embraces voluntary 
poverty. The former gives but ^ part, the latter gives the whole. 
And consider what immense good has been done, in spite of their 
poverty, by those who have given up all. 

The evangelical counsels are, however, not in themselves 
perfection, they are but a means towards its attainment. 

The highest perfection is the highest degree of charity towards 
God. To adopt the counsels does not make a man perfect, for it is 
possible to pledge one's self solemnly to do something and then not 
fulfil one's promise. A certain man sent his two sons to work in his 
vineyard. The one said: "I will not," but afterwards being moved 
with repentance he went. The other said : " I go, sir," and he went 
not (Matt. xxi. 28-30). There are many in a state of perfection 
who are very much the reverse of perfect. And those who profess to 
follow the counsels, and yet give way to love of eating, to anger, 
avarice, love of ease, or other sins, are all the more culpable; just as 
a messenger would be who, although he had no weight to carry, dallied 
on his way, and made no attempt to reach his destination. 

4. Not every one is called of God to follow the evangelical 
counsels ; for Our Lord says : "All men take not this word, but 
they to whom it is given" (Matt. xix. 11). 

Those are called to whom God gives the desire of this grace, and 
who are ready to make any effort to obtain it. Let not those who are 
not called to follow them hold the evangelical counsels in contempt. 
" If the ring does not fit thy finger," says St. Francis of Sales, " do 
not on that account cast it into the mire." 

5. The members of religious Orders are bound to follow the 
evangelical counsels, and likewise all persons living in the world 
who have taken a vow to do so. 

As a servant has to serve his master by reason of the duties he 
has taken upon himself, so the Religious is bound to strive after the 
highest perfection by following the counsels, by reason of the vows he 
has made. The religious Orders originated in this wise: St. Anthony 
the Great assembled around him in the Thebaid a number of disciples, 
who lived in separate cells, and occupied themselves with prayer and 
manual work, and followed the evangelical counsels. St. Pachomius 
(348 A.D.) collected these anchorites under one roof, and gave them 
a fixed rule. Thus the first cloister was established upon an island 
near the mouth of the W\\e. The monastic life was introduced into 
Palestine and Syria by the Abbot Hilarion, whose disciples numbered 



520 Christian Perfection, 

•ome three thousand, and into Asia Minor by St. Basil ^379 a.d.). 
Archbishop of CsBsarea. St. Martin, Bishop of Tours, and St. 
Benedict, were the founders of monasticism in the West in the fifth 
and sixth centuries. Thus the Orders arose for men and women; 
communities who led a regular life in accordance with the teaching 
of Christ. The men were called monks, from the Greek monachoit 
hermits; the women nuns, i.e., virgins. The principal Orders are: 
The Franciscans, founded by St. Francis of Assisi (1226) ; *the Do- 
minicans, by St. Dominic (1216) ; the Jesuits, by St. Ignatius of 
Loyola (1556) ; the Order of Mercy, by St. John of God (1550) ; the 
Lazarists, by St. Vincent of Paul (1660) ; the Redemptorists, by St. 
Alphonsus Liguori (1787), besides ^any others. Each Order has its 
special mission: the care of the sick, the instruction of youth, for- 
eign missions, etc. Religious are under the obligation of remain- 
ing in one place, either in a particular house (monastery) or a part 
of a house (enclosure). They are all subject to a superior, who is 
generally elected for three yeafrs. Each Order has a habit peculiar 
to itself. Admission to the Order is by profession, i.e., taking the 
vows; previous to being professed, a novitiate of at least one year 
has to be passed through. The religious Orders are very numerous 
at the present time in America and still more in Europe, excepting 
Germany, whence they are banished for the most part. It is an act 
of tyranny on the part of the State to forbid community life; it is 
depriving subjects of their natural rights. Besides, the religious 
Orders are not merely an ornament to the Church, they are an 
essential part of the Christian commonwealth. The suppression of 
the religious Orders by the secular power is a mutilation of the body 
corporate. The religious state affords more security of salvation than 
a secular life ; the means of grace can be employed more easily, more 
regularly; the religious are safeguarded from many occasions of sin 
which cannot be avoided in the world, through the supervision of the 
superior and also by the habit they wear. But those who do not live 
up to their religious profession, nor keep their vows, fall into a dis- 
orderly life and go swiftly to perdition. It is a mortal sin not to 
keep the vows. This causes St. Augustine to say : " As I have never 
met with a better man than a really good monk, so I have never seen 
a more wicked man upon earth than a bad Religious." Most of the 
Orders have, as history proves, done great work for humanity, 
especially by works of mercy and the encouragement of learning. The 
Benedictines in the Middle Ages cut down the primeval forests and 
cultivated the untilled soil. The contemplative Orders also con- 
tributed much to the furtherance of godliness and piety by their 
valuable writings. All the monastic houses were noted for their 
liberality to the poor. It cannot be denied that in some conventual 
houses in the Middle Ages laxity and self-indulgence prevailed, but 
on these the scourge of God fell. Persons living in the world often 
take a vow of chastity. Remember the example of St. Agnes; she 
suffered torture and martyrdom rather than break her vow by marry- 
ing the son of the Proconsul. The other two evangelical counsels are 
not suited for those who live in the world. 

The secular clergy are pledged to obey their bishop and 
lead a life of celibacy. 



The Eight Beatitudes. 521 

The secular clergy are bound to obey their bishop ; this obligation 
is imposed on them when they are admitted to the sub-diaconate; as 
also is the obligation of reciting the Breviary. The celibacy of the 
clergy was first made obligatory at the Synod of Elvira, in 306. 
During the three first centuries there was no need of this law, because 
priests voluntarily abjured marriage, out of respect for the sacredness 
of their office. Only at times when the lack of priests was most 
keenly felt, were married men admitted to the priesthood; but after 
ordination no one was permitted to marry. Only in isolated and 
very rare instances, for weighty reasons, has the Pope been known to 
dispense priests from their vow; and then they had to give up their 
benefices, and were debarred from all exercise of their sacerdotal 
functions. Yet they were required to recite the Breviary until death. 
In the Middle Ages Pope Gregory VII. made a determined stand 
against the marriage of priests, prohibiting those who had wives from 
performing any ministerial work. The Council of Trent (24, 9), 
declared the marriage of priests to be invalid. The apostles, after 
their vocation, left all they had; the great prophets, Elias, Eliseus, 
Jeremias, St. John Baptist, lived a celibate life. A parish priest must 
devote himself wholly to the salvation of souls; he must administer 
the sacraments to the sick at the risk of his life, he must assist the 
poor, admonish his flock, and offer the holy sacrifice of the Mass with 
a pure heart. 



IV. THE EIGHT BEATITUDES. 

Those who scrupulously keep God's commandments are 
happy even on earth. Hence Our Lord (Matt. v. 3-10), pro- 
nounces the following beatitudes: 

1. Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of 
heaven. 

This is the meaning of these words: Blessed are they who, 
however great their wealth, their dignity, their health, their 
learning, acknowledge that before God they are poor, for in this 
life they enjoy celestial peace and after death are partakers of 
eternal felicity. 

The poor in spirit are not the fools, but the humble. They are 
those who have the spirit of a little child. The rich in spirit are the 
proud, who think much of themselves because of all they possess. 
Yet the rich man may be poor in spirit, if he acknowledges that all 
his riches are valueless in God's sight. And a poor man is not poor 
in spirit if he pride himself on some quality or other that he pos- 
sesses. But as a rule, the rich are not, and the poor are, poor in 
spirit. The poor in spirit enjoy celestial peace, for Our Lord declares 
rtiat theirs is the kingdom of heaven. They are like rocks, externally 
barren and unproductive, but containing within rich veins of pure 
gold; for while they appear to the eye of man bereft of all joys they 
possess consolations of which the world knows nothing. The poor 
in spirit are admitted to eternal felicity. Heaven belongs to the 
poor in spirit, as the pearl belongs to the man who has purchased it 



522 Christian Perfection. 

at a goodly price; for the poor in spirit, by their renunciation of all 
earthly things, have bought heaven at the cost of all they possessed. 

2. Blessed are the meek; for thej shall possess the land. 
The meaning of these words is this: Blessed are they who 

preserve their composure (are not provoked to anger by the 
wrong done to them) ; for they will rule their fellow-men (they 
will conquer the hearts of men) and after death they will enter 
into heaven. 

(See the instruction on meekness.) 

3. Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be comforted. 
The meaning of these words is this: Blessed are they who 

lament but little over the loss of transitory things, for God will 
impart to them such consolation that they will forget their sor- 
row; and after death He will bestow upon them celestial and 
eternal joys. 

They that mourn are therefore not those who mourn over the loss 
of earthly things, e.g., the enjoyment of some pleasure. Sorrow such 
as that is a sign that the heart is not detached from the things of 
earth; it profits us no more than a plaster would heal a wound if it 
were laid beside, instead of on it. Sorrow is only a cure for sin. Un- 
less our sorrow is on account of sin, it will only be harmful; as a 
moth doth by a garment and a worm by the wood, so the sadness of 
a man consumeth the heart (Prov. xxv. 20). Sadness incapacitates 
the soul for action; it has the same benumbing effect upon it as ex- 
cessive cold has upon the body. A season of gloom and depression 
is an opportune moment for the devil ; he avails himself of it to tempt 
us and make us fall, as birds of prey go out by night in quest of spoil. 
Hence Holy Scripture exhorts us to be cheerful. The joyfulness of 
the heart is the life of a man, and a never-failing treasure of holiness 
(Ecclus. XXX. 23). But sorrow for sin, whether our own or that of 
others, is pleasing to God, and is succeeded by joy and gladness. 
What happiness awaited the prodigal son when he returned home, 
after deeply deploring his sin! What joy the penitent thief ex- 
perienced when Our Lord promised him paradise! What joy Mag- 
dalen felt when Christ pardoned her and commended her love! and 
David when, after he had bewailed his transgression (Ps. 1.), the 
prophet announced to him that he was forgiven! Mourning for 
sin can hardly be called sadness, because it is not incompatible with 
interior gladness. St. Jerome says : " In spite of penitential tears and 
heart-rending sighs I am sometimes so joyous that I fancy myself 
already with the angels." ISTor is sorrow on account of the trials Provi- 
dence sends us reprehensible; it too leads to joy and consolation. 
This was the sorrow Our Lord felt on the Mount of Olives, at the 
approach of His Passion ; and an angel appeared to Him, strengthen- 
ing Him. This was the sorrow the widow of Naim felt when her 
son was carried out for burial; and Our Lord consoled her grief by 
restoring him to life. The apostles mourned when Christ left them 
and ascended into heaven, and immediately two angels came to com- 
fort them. When God has happiness in store for us. He invariably 



The Eight Beatitudes. 523 

sends some trial first to make us more humble, more grateful for 
His gifts; thus light is more welcome after darkness, health is better 
appreciated after sickness. They that mourn will also be comforted 
hereafter. " God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes, and death 
shall not be any more, nor mourning, nor crying, nor sorrow " ( Apoc. 
xxi. 4). " They that sow in tears shall reap in joy" (Ps. cxxv. 5). 

4. Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after justice; for 
they shall be filled. 

The meaning of these words is this: Blessed are they who 
strenuously strive after truth and moral perfection, for they 
shall attain it, and shall be satisfied by the beatific vision of God 
in heaven. 

The centurion Cornelius sought after truth with prayer, fasting, 
and alms ; God instructed him first by an angel, and subsequently by 
the mouth of St. Peter. The pagan philosopher Justinus made a 
careful study of all the systems of philosophy in order to discover the 
truth, and God employed an old man on the banks of the Tiber to 
teach him the doctrines of Christianity. He who strives earnestly after 
sanctity will surely attain it. Clement Hofbauer, a baker's appren- 
tice, set his heart upon becoming a priest; he attained his end in 
spite of all hindrances, and has been beatified. A man who is tor- 
mented by hunger or thirst will do anything to obtain relief, as 
Esau relinquished his birthright; the saints acted in like manner, 
counting no exertion too great, no sacrifice too costly, in order to sat- 
isfy the hunger of their soul. This spiritual hunger and thirst, the 
craving for increase of knowledge and growth in holiness is attended 
by joy and causes no uneasiness to the soul. The aspiration after 
justice renders us fit to receive the communication of divine grace, 
for by fervent desires our heart is enlarged. Eternal felicity also 
awaits those who strive after justice; here below they never think 
they have reached their goal, they never say they have done enough. 
They hunger continually; and a never-ending hunger merits never- 
ending satisfaction. 

5. Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. 
The meaning of these words is this: Blessed are they who 

help their neighbor who is in need, for they will obtain from 
God pardon of their sins, and will be leniently judged at their 
death. 

(See what has been said on the usefulness of works of mercy.) 

6. Blessed are the clean of heart, for they shall see God. 
The meaning of these words is this: Blessed are they whose 

heart does not cling to the things of earth, for they will have 
a clearer perception of God in their lifetime, and after death will 
behold Him face to face (1 Cor. xiii. 12). 

The proud, the covetous, the intemperate, are not clean of heart, 
for the things of time and sense, honors, riches, the pleasures of the 
table, hold a place in their heart. Only those who are conscious of 
no habitual sin can be said to be clean of heart. What enabled St. 



524 Christian Perfection. 

John the Evangelist to penetrate Ho deeply into the mysteries of re- 
ligion, to gaze upon the sublimity of the Godhead ? " The sensual 
man perceiveth not these things that are of the spirit of God " (1 Cor. 
ii. 14) . " Wisdom will not enter into a malicious soul, nor dwell in 
a body subject to sins" (Wisd. i. 4). Truth does not reveal itself 
to the unclean, but from a pure heart it cannot be hid (St. Bernard). 
As a sheet of paper must be clean, upon which one is about to write, 
so that heart must be pure from carnal desires upon which God will 
set His seal by the action of the Holy Ghost. 

7. Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called the 
children of God. 

The meaning of these words is this: Blessed are they who 
make sacrifices for the sake of peace, and who promote peace 
among others; for here below they enjoy the special protection 
of God, and hereafter they will receive the reward of their self- 
conquest. 

(See the instruction upon peaceableness.) 

8. Blessed are they that suffer persecution for justice' sake; 
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 

The meaning of these words is this: Blessed are they who 
have to suffer at the hands of their fellow-men for the sake of 
their faith, or of some Christian virtue; for even in this life 
they will be filled with interior joy, and after death a high de- 
gree of felicity will be theirs. 

What indescribable happiness St. Stephen felt while he was being 
stoned; he saw the heavens opened and Christ standing in the glory 
of God (Acts vii. 55). St. Lawrence, who was broiled upon a red-hot 
gridiron in Kome, must have experienced similar consolations, for 
while he was enduring the torture he joked, saying to the pagan 
governor : " I am roasted enough on this side ; now turn me over to 
the other." St. Paul declares : " I exceedingly abound with joy in 
all our tribulation" (2 Cor. vii. 4). How could the martyrs have 
suffered torments so terrible with such equanimity, unless they had 
been mingled with celestial consolations? Our Lord says of those 
who suffer for His sake : " Your reward is very great in heaven " 
(Matt. V. 12). Persecutions are the precious stones wherewith the 
crowns of the saints are adorned in heaven. You must suffer with 
Christ here, if you would reign with Him thereafter. There is no 
greater honor upon earth than to suffer for God. The order in which 
the beatitudes are enumerated indicates the existence of three de- 
grees, or stages, in the spiritual life. (1), All sinful inclinations 
must be combated, by means of humility, meekness, sorrow for sin; 
(2), Our sanctification must be effected by means of striving after 
perfection and the practice of works of mercy; (3), We must be 
united to God, by cleanness of heart, by peaceableness, and patient en- 
durance of suffering. The beatitudes begin with the promise of 
the kingdom of heaven, and with it they end. This is to signify that 
eternal felicity is the reward of all the intervening beatitudes. What 



Tlie Eight Beatitudes. 525 

IS promised to the poor in spirit as their reward under the name of 
the kingdom of heaven, is the same as the land which the meek are 
to possess, the comfort promised to those who mourn, the satisfaction 
which is to be the portion of those who hunger and thirst after 
justice, the mercy to be obtained by the merciful, the contemplation 
of God which the clean of heart are to enjoy, the adoption of the 
peacemakers as the children of God, and the kingdom of heaven which 
belongs to the persecuted. The Church has appointed the eight 
beatitudes to be read as the Gospel on the feast of All Saints, because 
it was the prospect of this eternal reward which urged the saints on- 
ward on the path of virtue. 

The worldling counts those as fools whom Christ declares 
to be blessed. 

The world has its own maxims, which are utterly opposed to 
those of the Gospel. (1), Riches constitute the greatest happiness, 
poverty is the greatest misery. If a man has anything at all, he must 
make a show with it, or the world will not think much of him; (2), 
One ought not to put up with anything; (3), Happy is the man who 
is free from care and sorrow; (4), One must look to it that one makes 
a lot of money; (5), Let every one study his own advantage; (6), Let 
us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die; (7), One must take up arms 
in one's own defence, whenever one is wronged; (8), Blessed are they 
who have nothing to suffer. Well indeed might St. Paul say : " The 
wisdom of this world is foolishness with God " (1 Cor. iii. 19). 



PART III: THE MEANS OF 
GRACE. 



I. THE HOLY SACEinCE OF THE MASS. 
1, ON SACRIFICE IN CENEBAR 

Since the most important of all the means of grace, the holy- 
Mass, is a sacrifice, it is necessary first of all to speak of sacrifice in 
general. The word " to sacrifice " means to offer something valuable 
to some person as a token of affection for, or dependence on that per- 
son ; or to surrender something that we prize for the sake of another. 
If a father gives all he has to his sons to enable them to pursue their 
studies, and himself lives in straitened circumstances, he is said 
to make a great sacrifice for his children. When a soldier marches 
to battle for the defence of his country at the risk of life and limb, 
he is said to sacrifice himself for his country. B^^ a sacrifice to God 
is signified something given up to God. Out of love to Him the 
poor widow cast into the treasury the last two mites which she 
possessed; in doing this she made a great sacrifice for God's sake 
(Mark xii. 43). Tobias did the same, when in captivity he dis- 
tributed alms to his poorer fellow-countrymen, and at peril of his 
own life buried the bodies of the slain (Tob. i.). The Jews made a 
sacrifice, when after the giving of the law, they brought gold, silver, 
precious stones, purple, etc., to Moses for the making of the tabernacle 
(Exod. XXXV.). We are told in Holy Scripture that to keep the com- 
mandments, to depart from injustice, and to do mercy, is to offer sacri- 
fice (Ecclus. XXXV. 2-4). The essential part of a sacrifice is the surren- 
der or renunciation of some object which we highly prize. Of old, if 
any one desired to accentuate his surrender of the object he valued, 
he used to destroy it completely; thus rendering it impossible for 
him ever to recover possession of it The sacrifices offered by Cain, 
Abel, and ]Sroe, were of this nature. Abel slaughtered and burned 
the firstlings of his flock; his brother Cain offered of the fruits of 
the earth gifts unto the Lord (Gen. iv. 3, 5). Noe, on leaving the ark, 
took some of the animals and offered them as holocausts upon the 
altar he had built (Gen. viii. 20). 

1. Hence the word sacrifice signifies the voluntary surrender 

526 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 527 

or the destruction of an object which we value, to give honor to 
God as our supreme Lord. 

It is no uncommon thing among men to present a valuable present 
to some one as a sign of respect or an act of homage. Subjects not 
unf requently offer the best produce of their land or their skill to their 
monarch. So we ought to give to God what we most value. And 
as in a State there are certain honors which it is the exclusive pre- 
rogative of the ruler to receive, so the offering of sacrifice is an act 
of homage which can be paid only to God. 

2. There are bloody and unbloody sacrifices. 

As may be seen from the sacrifices of Cain and Abel, the oblation 
offered in sacrifice varied according to the nature of the possessions 
of him who offered it. Either a victim, such as an ox, a lamb, a dove, 
was taken from the animal kingdom (this was a bloody sacrifice, 
because the blood of the victim was shed), or an oblation was taken 
from the vegetable kingdom, some species of food, such as flour or 
fruit, or drink, wine, for instance (this was an unbloody sacrifice, 
because it was without shedding of blood). The animals used to be 
slaughtered, their blood poured upon the altar, and their flesh either 
consumed entirely by fire, or eaten in part by the priests and Levites. 
The fruits of the earth were either burned or eaten; wine was 
poured as a libation on or before the altar. 

3. The intention of a sacrifice may be to give honor to God, 
to give thanks to Hinij to entreat a favor, or make propitiation. 

The offering of a sacrifice gives outward expression to the feelings 
of the heart. The man who has a due knowledge of God, who knows 
Him to be the almighty Creator, the wise and bountiful Preserver 
and Ruler of the world, will be penetrated with sentiments of respect, 
of gratitude, of confidence, and of contrition. And since it belongs 
to the nature of man to manifest outwardly what he feels inwardly, 
he will evince these sentiments by the surrender, — the renunciation 
or destruction — of some object that he values. These sentiments are 
essential to a sacrifice — ^without them it would be mere hypocrisy — 
consequently the sentiment of compunction is of itself sometimes 
designated a sacrifice (Ps. 1. 19). Sacrifices of praise used to be 
offered daily in the Temple; Noe's sacrifice was a sacrifice of thanks- 
giving, while the sacrifices which Judas Machabeus caused to be 
offered before going to battle were deprecatory sacrifices; those 
offered for the warriors who fell in the fight were expiatory sacrifices 
(2 Mach. xii. 43). 

4. The custom of offering sacrifices has existed in all times 
and among all nations of the world. 

Sacrifices have been customary from time immemorial. They were 
offered by Cain and Abel, the children of the first man and the first 
woman. They are found among Jews and Gentiles. The Jewish high 
priest offered an oblation morning and evening in the name of the 
people; first he burned incense upon the altar, then he offered an 
imbloody sacrifice consisting of flour, oil and frankincense (Lev. vi. 



528 The Means of Grace» 

14), and finally a sacrifice in which was shedding of blood, the victim 
being a lamb of one year old, without blemish, together with an 
oblation of food and drink (Exod. xxix. 38). On the Sabbath day 
two lambs of a year old, together with bread and wine, were immolated 
in addition to the daily oblation (Numb, xxviii. 9). Special sacrifices 
were also appointed for certain feasts. The heathen nations also offered 
sacrifices, but their ideas on the subject were perverted, for they 
offered human sacrifices, and not to the true God, but to idols. Hence 
St. Paul says : " The things which the heathen sacrifice, they sacrifice 
to devils and not to God" (1 Cor. x. 20). We read in Holy Scripture 
that the King of Moab took his oldest son and offered him for a 
burnt-offering upon the wall, in order to obtain help against the 
Israelites (4 Kings iii. 27). The Phoenicians and other Asiatic 
people used yearly to immolate young children to their god Moloch, 
the brazen statue of the deity being made red-hot, and the children 
cast into its arms. The custom of offering human sacrifices formerly 
prevailed to a great extent in Mexico; it is said that the number of 
victims slaughtered yearly amounted to no less than twenty thousand. 
Human sacrifices are not yet entirely abolished, they are still cus- 
tomary among savages, notably among some African and Indian 
tribes. How sad is the condition of man without the Christian faith ! 

5. The chief motives which urge mankind to offer sacrifice 
are: The consciousness of sin and the desire for reconciliation 
with God and because. God often required or sanctioned the 
sacrifice. 

The consciousness of sin was a powerful incentive to man to offer 
sacrifices. St. Paul says : " In them there is made a commemoration 
of sins every year" (Heb. x. 3), and again: "Without shedding of 
blood there is no remission" (Heb. ix. 22). God not unfrequently 
showed His approbation of sacrifice; He testified His acceptance of 
Abel's offering (Gen. iv. 4). Of Noe's (Gen. viii. 21), of the holocaust 
offered by the prophet Elias, which was consumed by fire from heaven 
(3 Kings xviii. 38). On many occasions God required a sacrifice, as 
that of Isaac (Gen. xxii.). He gave minute directions^ concerning 
the sacrificial offerings to the Jews by Moses' lips (Lev. i.-vii.; xvi.; 
xxii.). The knowledge that God approved of and even demanded 
sacrifices from man was a potent motive inducing him to offer them. 

6. The sacrifices of the Jewish nation, more particularly that 
of the paschal lamb and the victim of expiation, were typical 
of the great sacrifice that the Kedeemer was to offer on Mount 
Calvary. 

In the Old Testament everywhere there is shedding of blood ; this 
was typical of the blood of Christ, whereby we are purified. On the 
great Day of Atonement one of the ceremonies consisted in this : The 
high priest laid both his hands upon the head of one of the goats 
which were to be offered up for the people, confessing at the same 
time the iniquities of the children of Israel, and praying that they 
might light upon the head of the animal ; ^ thereupon the goat was 
turned out into the desert, to express symbolically that the sins of the 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 529 

people were taken away out of God^s sight. Since the Jewish sacri- 
fices were but a foreshadowing of Our Lord's expiatory sacrifice, they 
ceased after this was offered, as had been foretold by the prophets 
(Dan. ix. 27; Osee iii. 4). Nor were the sacrifices of the heathen 
anything more or less than a seeking after the true sacrifice of atone- 
ment ; the victims were without blemish, a pure and spotless oblation ; 
moreover everywhere the persuasion seemed to prevail that " it is 
impossible that with the blood of oxen and goats sin should be taken 
away" (Heb. x. 4), or that the Deity should be propitiated by any 
other similar victims. A victim of infinite value was needed to 
reconcile God with man. 



2. THE SACRIFICE OF CHRIST UPON THE CROSS. 

1. The sacrifice which reconciled God with man was that 
which Christ offered upon the cross. 

The life of Our Lord upon earth may be said to have been one 
uninterrupted sacrifice. This sacrifice was commenced at the In- 
carnation, for then He divested Himself of His divine dignity that 
was His as Son of God, and took the form of a servant (Phil. ii. 7). 
He gave up His free will, becoming obedient to His heavenly Father 
unto death, even to the death of the cross (v. 8). This sacrifice was 
continued throughout His whole life. He relinquished all earthly 
possessions ; He Himself says : " The foxes have holes and the birds 
of the air have nests, but the Son of man hath not where to lay His 
head " (Matt. viii. 20). He often denied Himself the food of the body; 
for instance, on the occasion of His converse with the Samaritan 
woman. He said to His disciples, when they pressed Him to take some 
refreshment : " My meat is to do the will of Him that sent Me, that 
I may perfect His work" (John iv. 34). Even when wearied with 
His apostolic labors He denied Himself rest; we read that not un- 
frequently He went up into a mountain, and passed the whole night 
in prayer to God (Luke vi. 12). He willingly renounced honor, say- 
ing: "I seek not My own glory" (John viii. 50). He bore scorn 
and derision in silence, especially when brought before His judges 
(Luke xxiii. 11). He allowed Himself to be put on a par with mur- 
derers, and crucified between two thieves (Mark xv. 27). He suffered 
a notorious criminal to be preferred to Him (Matt, xxvii. 17). 
Finally, upon the cross. He surrendered all that He had, even His life 
itself, for He said : " Greater love than this no man hath, that a 
man lay down His life for His friends " (John xv. 13). Well might 
He exclaim immediately before His death : " It is consummated ! " 
The actual sacrifice of propitiation began with Our Lord's Passion, 
and ended with His death upon the cross. On the cross He gave His 
body to be offered up. It was not, it is true, slain, divided and 
burned with fire like the bodies of other victims, but it was 
cruelly tortured and deprived of life. While hanging upon the cross 
the Redeemer might echo the words of the Psalmist : " I am a worm 
and no man. T am poured out like water, and all My bones are scat- 
tered " (Ps. xxi. 7, 15). It was in reference to this expiatory sacrifice 
made by the Redeemer that the prophet spoke of the Messias as a 



530 The Means of Grace. 

lamb brought to the slaughter. When John the Baptist saw Christ 
approaching, he exclaimed: "Behold the Lamb of God; behold Him 
Who taketh away the sins of the world! " (John i. 29.) And St. Paul 
says : " Christ, our Pasch, is sacrificed." 

The sacrifice of the cross is, however, differentiated from 
every other sacrifice by the fact that in it the ofiiciating Priest 
is the Victim Himself; also because the value of this sacrifice 
is infinite. 

Christ Himself, as St. Augustine says, was both Priest and Victim, 
The soldiers were only instruments of which it pleased Him to make 
use. Had He willed otherwise, they would have had no power at all 
over Him. This He made manifest on Mount Olivet, for at the word : 
" I am He," they fell to the ground. The soldiers could not indeed 
have been the sacrificers, because by putting Christ to death they did 
not perform a work pleasing to God, but committed one of the greatest 
of all crimes. Christ was immolated, because it was His will to be 
immolated (Is. liii. 7). !N"ot all the sacrifices offered under the Old 
Testament had power to reconcile God and man ; their value was but 
finite. St. Paul says : " It is impossible that with the blood of oxen 
and goats sin should be taken away" (Heb. x. 4). These sacrifices 
could only serve as a means of recalling sin to men's minds, and 
awakening compunction; they had no cleansing power. With the 
sacrifice Christ offered it is quite otherwise. 

2. The sacrifice of Christ upon the cross was a vicarious sacri- 
fice for the sins of all mankind, and a sacrifice of superabundant 
value. 

Christ suffered in our stead. Of Him the prophet spoke when he 
said : " He was wounded for our iniquities. He was bruised for our 
sins " (Is. liii. 5). Christ, the second Adam, the Head of the human 
race, suffered for His members. The Good Shepherd gave His life 
for the sheep (John x. 15). We know by the experience of daily life 
that vicarious atonement is possible. IN'ot only property, but disgrace 
or glory may be bequeathed to posterity. A family, nay more, a 
whole nation, will be proud of a great man bom in their midst, and 
on the other hand, nations are sometimes severely chastised for the 
sins of a single individual. Original sin has become the heritage of 
humanity, and in like manner the merits of one man may become 
the heritage of all mankind. Christ made atonement for the sin of 
the whole human race, original as well as actual sin. The apostle 
says : " He is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only, but 
also for those of the whole world " (1 John ii. 2). Christ is the true 
Paschal Lamb, the sacrifice of which did not liberate one nation from 
the yoke of Pharao, but the whole human race from the servitude of 
Satan. Although (3hrist died for all, yet all do not receive the benefit 
of His death; only those to whom the merit of His Passion is com- 
municated (Council of Trent, C. 6, 3). Christ's atonement was more 
than sufficient; He suffered beyond what was necessary. A single 
drop of His blood would have sufficed to wash away the sins of all 
mankind, for He is very God, and the least of His actions is of in- 
finite value. Christ suffered more than it is possible for any human 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 531 

being to suffer. Hence He cried aloud upon the cross : " My God, My 
God, why hast Thou forsaken Me ? " 

Our Lord suffered so much in order to show how much He 
Joves us, and how greatly God is offended by sin. 

A single word of Christ would have fully sufficed to redeem us, 
but it was not enough to make manifest the love of God. It is be- 
cause of the great love Christ displays towards us, that we venerate 
the most Sacred Heart of Jesus. The heart is the centre of the phys- 
ical life; from it the blood flows into every part of the body, main- 
taining its vitality. And since there is an intimate connection be- 
tween body and soul, the heart is spoken of as the centre of the spir- 
itual life, whence all the thoughts and feelings take their rise. Hence 
we say: "My heart rejoiced, my heart is grieved, etc." The heart 
is regarded pre-eminently as the seat of love. When we venerate the 
Sacred Heart of Jesus, we call to mind His exceeding great love 
for us, and are stimulated to return love for love. God made use 
of a French nun at Paray-le-Monial, named Margaret Mary Ala- 
coque, to propagate this devotion. Our Lord appeared to her re- 
peatedly, showing her His Heart pierced by the lance, emitting flames 
of fire, surrounded by a crown of thorns — to signify the pain sinners 
cause to Our Saviour — and surmounted by a shining cross. Our 
Lord intimated His desire that pictures of this Heart should be ex- 
posed for veneration, and promised signal blessings to all who should 
practice this devotion. He also commanded the festival of the 
Sacred Heart to be kept on the Friday after the octave of Corpus 
Christi. This day is a most appropriate one, for it was on a Friday 
that Our Lord by His death gave the greatest possible proof of His 
Icve, and His Heart was pierced by the lance. Moreover the Ador- 
able Sacrament of the Altar affords abundant testimony to the love 
of the Saviour, for as the sun's rays are focussed in a lens, so the rays 
of the sun of divine love are concentrated in the Sacrament of the 
Altar. Hence the feast of Corpus Christi is a special memorial of 
the love of Christ for man. The devotion to the Sacred Heart, op- 
posed at the outset, as are all works that are of God, spread rapidly 
over all the earth, and was attended by signal blessings. Another 
reason why Our Lord suffered so much was that He might be a 
pattern to us in suffering : " Christ suffered for us, leaving you an 
example" (1 Pet. ii. 21). He Himself said: "I have given you an 
example" (John xiii. 15). 

3. The graces which Christ merited for us by His death are 
commnnicated to us by the means of grace; that is to say, the 
holy sacrifice of the Mass, the sacraments, the sacramentals, and 
prayer. 

The means of grace are the channels whereby the divine Re- 
deemer conveys to us the graces He merited for us upon the cross. 
His side was opened that the means of grace might thence flow out. 
It is because the Church, through the medium of the appointed means 
of grace, communicates to the faithful the graces flowing from the 
cross of Christ, that in dispensing them she always makes use of the 
sign of the cross. 



532 Tlie Meaiis of Grace. 

He who neglects the use of the means of grace cannot be 
saved, in spite of Christ's death. 

Medicine cannot work a cure unless the sick man swallows it. 
" He Who made thee without thyself," says St. Augustine, " will not 
save thee without thyself." The devil makes strenuous efforts to de- 
prive men of the means of grace. He acts like the General Holo- 
fernes, who when besieging the town of Bethulia cut off the aque- 
ducts, in order to reduce the inhabitants through want of water; for 
he deters the faithful from drinking from the channels of grace, by 
inspiring them with indifference or aversion towards them. 



3. THE INSTITUTION, NATURE, AND PRINCIPAL 
PARTS OF THE MASS, 

At the Last Supper the Son of God changed bread into His 
body, and wine into His blood; He then gave both to the apos- 
tles, bidding them eat and drink the same. 

We are told that after the washing of the feet Our Lord sat down 
at the table, took bread in His hands, looked up to heaven, gave 
thanks, blessed it, broke it, and gave it to His apostles, saying : " Take 
ye and eat; this is My body." And after the apostles had received 
the body of Christ, He took the chalice in which was wine, gave 
thanks, blessed it, and gave it to His disciples, saying: "Drink ye 
all of this, for this is My blood; the blood of the new, the eternal 
covenant, the mystery of faith (a mystery for the trial of our faith), 
which shall be shed for you and for many for the remission of sins. 
Do this for a commemoration of Me." (These are known as the 
words of consecration.) 

After the consecration, the species or appearance of the 
bread and wine still remained the same. 

The body of Christ had not the appearance of flesh, but the ap- 
pearance of bread; it had the smell, the taste, the color, the weight, 
etc., of bread ; the species was in fact retained. ISTor did the blood of 
Christ bear the appearance of blood, but of wine; it had the smell, 
the taste, the color, etc., the ordinary appearance of wine. (This sub- 
ject will be enlarged upon in the instructions concerning the Adorable 
Sacrament of the Altar.) 

1. The Son of God offered a sacrifice at the Last Supper, be- 
cause Ke gave His body and blood to be offered up, in order to 
reconcile His heavenly Father with man. 

At the Last Supper our blessed Lord instituted a visible sacrifice, 
in order thereby to represent the bloody sacrifice which was to be 
offered once upon the cross, and to preserve the memory thereof unto 
the end of the world. Our Lord indicated to us that He intended at 
the Last Supper to institute a sacrifice, by choosing for this act the 
very time when the paschal lamb was slain and eaten. Moreover the 
words He. made, use of were almost identical with those which Moses 



TJie Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 533 

spoke on the institution of the Old Covenant. We read that Moses, 
after the giving of the law on Mount Sinai, slaughtered an animal, 
and sprinkled the blood upon the people, saying : " This is the blood 
of the covenant which the Lord hath made with you" (Exod. xxiv. 
8). As Our Lord's words were similar to these, it follows that in His 
case also there was a sacrifice. Again it is a significant fact that Our 
Lord caused His Passion and death to follow immediately after the 
Last Supper ; by this He would have us know that they were one and 
the same act. The sacrifice begins with the consecration, when Christ 
assumes the form of bread and wine; for He then divests Himself of 
the splendor of His divine glory, and conceals His infinite majesty. 
Nay, more, not only does He conceal His divine grandeur. He also 
conceals His human presence. " Christ, the King of heaven and of 
earth, reduces Himself by the words of consecration to a condition 
of abasement which is almost equivalent to annihilation. Not even 
a trace can be perceived of that regal dignity with which His hu- 
manity was invested, and which inspired men with reverence and awe. 
At His birth at Bethlehem He was at least in the likeness of man, but 
here He seems to be nothing but a morsel of bread." By this pro- 
found self-abasement Our Lord reconciles us to His Father, Who is 
justly angry with us; for there is no better 'means of appeasing one 
whom we have offended than by humbling ourselves before him. 
King Achab averted the punishment of which he was warned by the 
prophet Elias, by humbling himself before God (3 Kings xxi. 27) ; 
the Ninivites did the same. The sacrifice is not consummated until 
the species of bread and wine are consumed. Thus it was with the 
sacrifice Our Lord made upon the cross; He suffered first. His body 
being torn and mangled; then death came, and His human existence 
was ended. The sacrifice was accomplished; He spoke the words: 
"It is consummated ! " Hence it will be seen that the unbloody 
sacrifice of the altar is in every respect a faithful representation and 
a true repetition of the bloody sacrifice of the cross. What the death 
of Christ was then, the reception of the sacred elements is now. Thus 
St. Paul says that those who eat this bread and drink the chalice 
show the death of the Lord (1 Cor. xi. 26). Moreover the separate 
forms of bread and wine symbolize the destruction of Christ's human 
nature, for the body and blood of Christ are separated one from the 
other upon the altar, as they were upon the cross, when the blood 
flowed out of His body through the countless wounds. We also 
gather that the object of this unbloody sacrifice is the reconciliation 
of man with God, from the words Our Lord uttered at the Last Sup- 
per. " This is My blood." He said, " which is shed for the remission of 
sin." This unbloody sacrifice is therefore like the sacrifice of the 
cross, truly a propitiatory sacrifice (Council of Trent, 22, 2). We are 
not, indeed, redeemed anew by it, for we are redeemed by the bloody 
sacrifice, but the fruits of redemption are applied to our souls by this 
unbloody sacrifice. Nor is this unbloody sacrifice of itself sufficient 
to reconcile men to God without their own co-operation; but it has 
the effect of awakening them to a sense of sin, exciting them to con- 
trition, inducing them to confess their sins and avoid them in future. 

1. The apostles had, and their successors have, the power of 
offering the same sacrifice, for the Son of God at once com- 



534 The Means of Grace, 

manded and empowered them to do so, when He said : " Do 
this for a commemoration of Me" (Council of Trent, 22, 1). 

When Christ gave His twelve apostles His flesh to eat and His 
blood to drink, He commanded them to immolate Him in lieu of the 
usual sacrificial victims. God had enjoined upon the Jews to slay a 
paschal lamb every year, in remembrance of their deliverance from 
Egyptian slavery, and in like manner it was His will that a special 
sacrifice should be offered in commemoration of the death of Christ 
upon the cross, and the redemption of mankind from the servitude of 
the devil (Council of Trent, 22, 1). 

2. This sacrifice was foretold in the Old Testament both by 
types and prophecies. 

Several sacrifices in the Old Testament were types of the true 
sacrifice; the offering made by Abel, to which the Lord had respect 
(Gen. iv. 4), because it was offered by faith in the future Redeemer 
and His true oblation (Heb. xi. 4) ; the sacrifice of Abraham, who in 
obedience to God's command offered his son Isaac upon Mount Moria, 
without shedding his blood (Gen. xxii.), and above all, the sacrifice 
of Melchisedech, the King of Salem (i.e., the king of peace), who 
offered bread and wine (Gen. xiv. 18). These three sacrifices are 
mentioned in the Mass, immediately after the consecration, when the 
priest beseeches God to look propitiously upon our gifts, as He was 
graciously pleased to accept the gifts of Abel, Abraham, and Mel- 
chisedech. The holy Mass was also foretold by prophecies. David 
predicted that the Messias would be a priest forever, according to the 
order of Melchisedech (Ps. cix. 5). The prophet Malachias foretold 
the holy Mass to the Jews who, after their return from captivity, 
performed the sacrificial ceremonies in a careless manner, saying: 
" I have no pleasure in your sacrifices, saith the Lord of hosts ; I will 
not receive a gift of your hands. Tor from the rising of the sun 
even to the going down. My name is great among the Gentiles; and 
in every place there is sacrifice, and there is offered to My name a 
clean oblation" (Mai. i. 10, 11). 

3. This sacrifice was ofiFered by the apostles, and it has since 
been offered by their successors, the bishops and priests of the 
Church. 

Even in apostolic times the Christians were accustomed to as- 
semble together, on Sunday particularly, for breaking of bread (Acts 
XX. 7, 11). St. Paul repeatedly mentions the chalice of benediction 
which was blessed and given to the faithful, and the bread whereof they 
partook (1 Cor. x. 16; xi. 26). He says: "We have an altar whereof 
they have no power to eat who serve the tabernacle" (Heb. xiii. 10). 
It is recorded that the Apostle Andrew when urged by the pro- 
consul to offer to the gods, said to him : " I offer daily to the almighty 
and true God, not the flesh of oxen or the blood of rams, but the im- 
maculate Lamb of God ; and when all the congregation of the faithful 
have received His sacred body, the same Lamb that was immolated 
is still unconsumed and lives forevermore." St. Justin, in one of 
the apologetic writings he addressed to the Roman emperor, speaks 
of the different parts of the Christian sacrifice, the reading and ex- 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 535 

planation of Holy Scripture, the oblation of bread and wine, the 
consecration and transformation of the sacred elements, and their dis- 
tribution to the people. The oldest of the Fathers of the Church 
mention the sacrifice of the Mass. St. Irenseus, Bishop of Lyons 
(202 A.D.), says : " The oblation of the New Covenant is the Lord's Sup- 
per; Christ instituted it as at once a sacrifice and a sacrament, and 
throughout all the world the Church offers this sacrifice." St. Cyp- 
rian, Bishop of Carthage (258 a.d.), says: "In the Church the priest 
offers the same sacrifice which Christ Himself offered," and again: 
" Day by day, in times of persecution and of peace, we offer the sacri- 
fice whereby the faithful are prepared to give themselves as sacrificial 
victims by a martyr's death." Pope Leo the Great says : " The on<< 
oblation of the body and blood of Christ is substituted for all the 
former sacrifices." The frescoes in the Catacombs bear witness to 
the offering of the holy sacrifice, likewise the most ancient liturgies, 
the altars, chalices and vestments, which would not have been needed 
had not the Mass been celebrated. Some of these are still preserved, 
among them the wooden altar at which St. Peter and his successors 
for nearly three centuries said Mass. Until the tenth century no 
heretic dared to impugn the holy sacrifice. Luther attacked it most 
vehemently, at the instigation of the devil, as he himself confessed. 

2. We call the sacrifice instituted by Our Lord at the Last 
Supper holy Mass, or the sacrifice of the Mass. 

In the first centuries of Christianity the catechumens and peni- 
tents used to be sent away out of the church at the commencement of 
the sacrifice. The Latin for dismissal is missio (missa).'^ Hence it 
came to pass that the ceremonies consequent to the dismissal of the 
catechumens were called the missa, the Mass. This expression is 
used by Pope Pius I. as early as the second century; it also occurs 
frequently in the writings of St. Augustine and St. Ambrose. An- 
other explanation of the word missio (mission) is that it denotes the 
sending of Our Lord from heaven to earth at the moment of the 
consecration, and again the sending of the sacred Victim up to heaven 
by the faithful in the hands of angels; as St. Bonaventure says: 
" First of all God sends His Son down to us upon the altar, then the 
Church sends Him up to the Father, to make intercession for sin- 
ners." The sacrifice of the Mass must be clearly distinguished 
from the Sacrament of the Altar. In the latter Christ is present as 
an object of our worship and as our spiritual sustenance; in the 
former He is also our Victim and the means of our salvation. 

1, The sacrifice of the Mass is the chief and central act of 
Catholic worship. 

Several of the sacraments and the sacramentals can only be ad- 
ministered in connection with the Mass. It stands in the same rela- 
tion to the other services of the Church as a jewel does to its setting. 
It is a reservoir wherein the streams of grace are collected which flow 
from the sacrifice of the cross, and whence they are poured out upon 
mankind through the channels of the sacraments. The holy Mass is 

* The true derivation of the worcl missa is wrapped in obscurity. Th« 
derivations given in the text are conjectural. 



536 The Means oj Grace, 

the sun of grace, day by day rising upon the world, the bright rays of 
which, in the prismatic colors of the seven sacraments, form the fair 
rainbow, the emblem of peace, the connecting link between heaven's 
riches and earth's poverty. The dignity of holy Mass surpasses by 
many degrees that of the sacraments, for they are only vessels of 
mercy for the living, whereas the Mass is an inexhaustible ocean of 
divine liberality for the living and the dead. In the holy Mass man 
has a foretaste of heaven upon earth, for in the sacred Victim he has 
before him the Creator of heaven and of earth, he even holds Him in 
his hands. The sacrifice of the Mass contains in itself as many mys- 
teries as there are drops in the ocean, stars in the firmament, flowers 
upon the earth. Take this sacrifice away from the Catholic Church 
and you leave nothing but unbelief and error. Were holy Mass not of 
such surpassing excellence the devil would not have aroused so many 
enemies against it among heretics. 

2. The sacrifice of the Mass is a catholic sacrifice in the true 
sense of the word, for it is and will be offered unceasingly 
throughout the whole earth until the end of time. 

At the present time some 350,000 Masses are celebrated daily on 
our globe ; there is not an hour in the day in which Mass is not being 
said. Thus the words of the prophet are literally fulfilled: "From 
the rising of the sun until the going down, in every place there is 
sacrifice" (Mai. i. 10). Mass will be celebrated until the Day of 
Judgment (1 Cor. xi. 26). ISTot any or all of the adversaries of the 
Church, not Antichrist himself, will be able to suspend the offering 
of the holy sacrifice. The last Mass said will be on the last day of this 
world's existence. This is what Our Lord meant when He said : " I 
am with you all days, even to the consummation of the world " (Matt, 
xxviii. 20). 

3. What takes place in the sacrifice of the Mass is this : The 
priest at the altar, as the representative of Christ, offers up bread 
and wine to almighty God; he changes these substances into the 
body and blood of Christ, and destroys them by consuming them. 

Thus it is not the priest, but Christ Himself, Who in the 
Mass is the sacrificing Priest. 

From the words of the consecration it is evident that the priest 
is only an instrument of which Our Lord makes use, for the priest 
says : " This is My body, this is My blood," although he does not 
change the bread and wine into his own body and blood. It is not 
the man who causes the oblation upon the altar to be changed into 
the body and blood of Our Lord, it is Christ Himself; Christ, our 
High Priest, Who is holy, innocent, undefiled, separate from sinners, 
purer than all the celestial spirits (Heb. vii. 26). Hence the sacrifice 
of the Mass does not lose its value, supposing the officiating priest 
should be living in sin. The Council of Trent declares that the sacri- 
fice of the Mass cannot be defiled through the unworthiness or malice 
of him who offers it. " This oblation is holy," says St. John Chrysos- 
tcm, "be the priest what he may; for man does not consecrate, but 
Christ." 

Christ is also the Victim which is immolated in the Mass. 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 537 

Christ is the Priest Who offers the sacrifice, and He is likewise the 
Victim which is offered. The Priest and the Victim are one and the 
same. Christ our Paschal Lamb, once immolated upon the cross, is 
daily immolated anew upon our altars. Christ offered Himself, be- 
cause among all the treasures of heaven and of earth He could find 
nothing that could serve as a worthy oblation to be offered to the 
Blessed Trinity. The sacred humanity of Our Lord is the most 
precious, the most perfect work of God. Even the inexpressible 
beauty of the Mother of God is, in comparison to the humanity of 
Christ, as a flaming torch beside the noonday sun. Even the graces 
and prerogatives which God has bestowed upon the angels and the 
saints, all taken together, fall far short of the graces and excellences 
appertaining to the sacred humanity of Christ. By reason of its 
intimate union with the Godhead it is enriched with boundless treas- 
ures and endowed with infinite dignity. 

4. There are three distinct parts in the sacrifice of the Mass: 
the offertory, the consecration, and the communion. 

The sanctuary bell is rung at the consecration and the com- 
munion, and also between the offertory and the consecration, at the 
Sanctus. 

1. What takes place at the offertory is this : Bread and 
wine are offered to God and blessed. 

The priest takes the paten whereon the Host is placed, and elevates 
it, offering the Host to God. Then he takes the chalice, pours into 
it wine and a little water, elevates it, and offers it likewise to God. 
He next invokes the Holy Spirit and blesses the oblation with his 
hand. This is called the offertory, because the actual sacrificial act 
does not begin until the consecration. For if the priest who was 
celebrating should chance to fall sick, or any accident should occur, 
if it was before the consecration he could break off the Mass, but 
not after the consecration ; in that case he must take the communion 
immediately, and then leave the altar. And supposing the priest 
were to die after having consecrated, another priest must proceed with 
the Mass, even were he not fasting ; but if the priest who was celebrat- 
ing died before the consecration, it would not be necessary to go on 
with the Mass. What does this prove ? The name of offertory is 
given to this part of the Mass because in early times the offerings of 
bread and wine were made by the faithful. The bread is prepared 
from wheaten flour; it is unleavened, because the bread Our Lord 
used was unleavened, and also because it denotes the purity of the 
body of Christ; it is round in shape, to symbolize the eternal nature 
of Christ, without beginning and without end. A large Host must be 
used at Mass, unless only small ones can be had. The wine must be 
prepared from the juice of grapes; a little water is mixed with it, 
because this was done by Christ. The water and the wine are also in 
commemoration of the water and blood which flowed from His riven 
side. 

2. What takes place at the consecration is this: The bread 
is changed into the body, and the wine into the blood of Christ; 
and they are then elevated in the sight of the people. 



538 The Means of Grace. 

The consecration is effected bj means of the words Otir 
Lord uttered at the Last Supper. 

At the consecration something similar occurs to that which oc- 
cured when Elias offered sacrifice on Mount Carmel, when the fire of 
the Lord fell, and consumed the holocaust (3 Kings xviii.) ; in that 
case however the agent was natural fire, whereas at Mass it is the 
supernatural fire of the Holy Ghost. As natural fire changes wood 
into glowing embers, so the Holy Spirit effects the transubstantiation 
of the oblation by words of fire. Hence from the earliest times it was 
customary in the East — as we learn from ancient liturgies — to call 
upon the Holy Ghost to come and effect the change. At the moment 
of consecration the heavens are opened at the word of the priest, and 
Christ, the King of heaven, descends from above with His courtiers, 
the angels, who wait upon their Monarch. He descends from heaven 
upon our altars as swiftly as the eyes on being opened perceive at once 
the most distant objects. At the moment of consecration, the Incar- 
nation of the Son of God takes place anew, and in the same manner 
as when, at the salutation of the angel, Mary was overshadowed by 
the Holy Ghost. As the Blessed Virgin then spoke but a few words, 
so now the priest utters but a few words, and the Son of God comes 
down from heaven at his summons. It is because Christ becomes 
man again in the Mass, that at the conclusion the words : " The Word 
was made flesh, and dwelt among us," are read; and when the Credo 
is sung at High Mass, special emphasis is given to the sentence: 
Incarnatus est, de Spiritu Sancto, ex Maria Virgine; et homo factus 
est. The birth of Christ is also repeated in the Mass, with this dif- 
ference, that Christ is not born corporally, as at Bethlehem, but 
spiritually; that He is not now clad in mortal flesh, but arrayed in 
His glorified body, resplendent with the five sacred wounds. It is 
on account of this spiritual birth that the Church appoints the Gloria 
in excelsis, the song of praise sung by the angels at Bethlehem, to 
form part of the Mass, and that Our Lord has appeared many times 
after the consecration under the form of an infant. An appearance 
of this kind is said to have been the means of converting the Saxon 
chief Wittekind, who, when at war with the Emperor Charlemagne, 
entered the enemy's camp in disguise, and was present when Mass 
was said. The same announcement may be made to us Christians 
as was made by the angels to the shepherds of yore : " Behold, I bring 
you glad tidings of great joy, for to-day is born to you a Saviour." 

3. What takes place at the communion is this: The priest 
receives the body and blood of Christ, and oftentimes adminis- 
ters the body of Christ to the faithful. 

Before the priest communicates the people, the Confiteor is re- 
peated and at the end he absolves and blesses the faithful ; then tak- 
ing the sacred vessel containing the Hosts in his hand, he holds one 
up in the sight of the people, saying: "Behold the Lamb of God, 
behold Him Who taketh away the sins of the world ;" and then repeats 
three times: "Lord, I am not worthy that Thou shouldst enter under 
my roof; say but the word and my soul shall be healed." To each of 
the communicants, when administering holy communion to him, he 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 539 

says : " May the body of Our Lord Jesus Christ preserve thy soul to 
life everlasting, Amen ; " having previously made the sign of the 
cross over him with the sacred Host, to signify that it is the crucified 
Redeemer Whom he gives to him. The Hosts that remain after the 
communion of the people are reserved in the ciborium, which is placed 
in the tabernacle. In each of these Hosts which were consecrated in 
the Mass Our Lord remains present. They are used to give com- 
munion at other times than in the Mass. Communion may be given 
at any time when it is allowable to say Mass; but not on Good 
Friday, nor on Holy Saturday until after the communion of the 
priest. If there should not be enough Hosts for the intending com- 
municants, the priest may divide them, or in extreme cases, a particle 
may be broken off the large Host. 



J^. TEE CEREMONIAL OF TEE MASS. 

1. In the course of time many ceremonies of deep significance 
grouped themselves around the holy sacrifice of the Mass, which 
were not to be omitted without absolute necessity. 

As early as the third century, certain prayers and ceremonies were 
added to the essential part of the sacrifice of the Mass. The service 
began with psalms sung by the people (at the present time the priest 
says the psalm Judica me at the foot of the altar) ; this was followed 
by the petition for mercy (the priest now recites the Confiteor at the 
foot of the altar, and the Eyrie Eleison standing in front of the 
altar). Then came the thanksgiving for the pardon of sin (now the 
Gloria is said immediately after the Eyrie). The officiating bishop 
next turned to the people and pronounced the salutation: Do minus 
vohiscum, "the Lord be with you," and then with extended arms 
offered a prayer in the name of the people (the collect). After this 
one of the acolytes read a portion of one of the epistles, then a portion 
taken from one of the gospels, as is done in the present day, the con- 
gregation standing meanwhile, and the bishop gave a short explana- 
tion of the gospel of the day. When this was ended, one of the 
ministers, generally the deacon, called upon the catechumens (i.e., 
the Jews or heathen who were under instruction for Baptism) to 
leave the church ; if he did not feel sure about any one who remained, 
he required the watchword of him, that is, he made him repeat the 
confession of faith, that was known only to the Christians. This 
division of the Mass, up to the Creed, was the preparatory part, and 
used to be called the Mass of the catechumens. At this point the 
actual sacrifice of the Mass began. The faithful presented offerings 
of bread and wine, from which the deacons took what was required 
for the Mass; this the bishop then offered to God and blessed (the 
offertory). He then washed the fingers with which he had touched 
the bread, and one of the acolytes called upon the people to pray for 
the catechumens who had just departed, for the clergy and the Church 
in general, for friends and for foes. (The Orate Fratres is now said 
by the priest.) Then followed a prayer of thanksgiving, in imitation 
of Our Lord, Who gave thanks before consecrating the elements (the 
preface of the present day, which ends with the Sanctus, an ascrip- 



540 The Means of Grace. 

tion of praise to the Holy Trinity), and all present prayed, as had 
been enjoined upon them, for the Pope, the bishop, the emperor, invok- 
ing the intercession of the Mother of God, of the apostles and holy 
martyrs. Then came the consecration, the ceremonial for which was 
the same as it is now; the people prostrating themselves in lowly 
adoration at the elevation of the Host and of the chalice. The prayer 
for the dead came next, some of the martyrs being commemorated; 
the Pater Noster was said aloud, and the Agnus Dei three times: 
" O Lamb of God, Thou that takest away the sins of the world, have 
mercy upon us." Upon this the communion followed, the bishop 
received the body and blood of Christ, and gave communion to the 
faithful; they crossed their hands, the sacred Host being placed on 
the palm of the left hand. During the communion appropriate psalms 
were sung (the priest now recites some verses from the psalms at the 
right hand side of the altar, which are called the post-communion). 
The Hosts that remained over were placed in a chest, or a vessel in 
the shape of a dove beside the altar. After a concluding prayer, the 
bishop saluted the people with the words, Dominus vohiscum, and 
dismissed them, saying : Ite, missa est : " Depart, the Mass is ended." 
The blessing being given, the commencement of St. John's Gospel 
was generally read, in which occur the words ; " The Word was made 
flesh," and : " He came unto His own, and His own received Him not," 
the former being an allusion to the presence of Our Lord in the holy 
sacrifice, the latter having reference to the sin of those who, without 
good reason, absent themselves from Mass. In the course of the 
Mass, which, if a low Mass, lasts from twenty-five to thirty minutes, 
the celebrant has to observe no less than five hundred ceremonies, 
such as bowing down, smiting his breast, making the sign of the cross, 
etc. All this ceremonial is intended to impress the faithful more 
deeply with the majesty of so great a sacrifice; also to incite them 
to the contemplation of those most sublime things that are hidden 
in the Mass (Council of Trent, 22, 5). Each of the ceremonies has 
its own special meaning. 

2. The whole story of the Redemption is symbolically repre- 
sented by the ceremonies of the Mass. 

The opening prayers, said by the priest at the foot of the altar, 
and at a little distance from it, are emblematic of the 4000 years during 
which man was comparatively far from God, and looking for the re- 
demption. The Eyrie, repeated nine times, and the Gloria, signify 
the book of Christ, and the song of praise sung by the nine choirs of 
angels at Bethlehem; the Orationes, the youth of Our Lord, which 
was passed in prayer and seclusion from the world. The Epistle, the 
carrying across of the missal, the Gospel and the Creed, are to re- 
mind us that the Gospel was first preached to the Jews, and being 
rejected by them, was proclaimed to the Gentiles, many of whom be- 
lieved and vrere baptized. The offertory represents Our Lord's 
preparation for His Passion and His willingness to surrender Hif^ 
life. The preface, which ends with the words : " Blessed is He that 
cometh in the name of the Lord, Hosanna in the highest," represents 
Christ's entry into Jerusalem; the prayer for the living, His prayer 
for the Church before the Last Supper. The five crosses which the 
priest makes over the oblation are symbolical of the five times tha*^ 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 541 

Our Lord was mocked, before Annas, Caiphas, Herod, Pilate, and 
once again before Herod. The elevation of the bread and wine, of 
His lifting up on the cross; the five crosses made from time to time 
over the elements, of the five sacred wounds. The seven petitions of 
the Lord's Prayer represent the seven wounds upon the cross; the 
breaking of the Host, the death of Christ, when His soul and body 
were parted. When the priest says the Agnus Dei and strikes his 
breast, it recalls the action of the soldiers and others present upon 
Calvary, who, amazed at the stupendous convulsions of nature, struck 
their breasts, while the centurion exclaimed : " Indeed this man was 
the Son of God ! " (Luke xxiii. 48 ; Mark xv. 39.) The communion 
represents the burial of Christ; the Dominus vohiscum, twice re- 
peated. His salutation of the apostles on His twofold appearance to 
them after His resurrection ; the words of dismissal, Ite, missa est. His 
ascension, when He sent His apostles forth to evangelize the world, 
and blessed them for the last time ; and the Last Gospel, the propaga- 
tion of the Gospel after the descent of the Holy Ghost. Thus the 
Mass is seen to be a brief compendium of Our Lord's life ; in one half 
hour all is depicted which He did during thirty-three years upon 
earth (Cochem). 



5. THE RELATION WHICH THE MASS BEARS TO THE 
SACRIFICE OF THE CROSS. 

1. The sacrifice of the Mass is a living renewal of the sacrifice 
©f the cross, for in the Mass, as upon the cross, Christ immolates 
Himself. 

Only in the Mass He sacrifices Himself in an unbloody man- 
ner under the appearance of bread and wine, whereas on the 
cross He sacrificed Himself in a bloody manner as man. 

Since it is impossible for the faithful to be present at Our Lord's 
sacrifice of Himself upon the cross, He has provided a means whereby 
they can at least assist at the repetition of that sacrifice, and gain the 
same merit that would have beei> theirs had they actually stood be- 
neath the cross on Calvary. The Son of God foresaw that, despite 
all His bitter Passion, many millions of mankind would not be saved; 
for their sake He offered Himself to His heavenly Father, expressing 
His readiness to hang upon the cross, not for three hours only, but 
until the Last Day; and as this could not be, He devised in His 
wisdom a plan whereby He could daily suffer anew in a mystical 
manner, in the holy sacrifice of the Mass, and anew move His Father 
to compassion. Th^ Mass is consequently no mere image of the 
sacrifice of the cross; it is not a bare memorial of it, it is the self- 
same sacrifice which was consummated on Calvary (Council of Trent, 
22, 3), and accordingly it is of the self-same value and of the self- 
same efficacy. In the Mass the Passion and death of the Son of 
God take place again in a mystic manner. His blood is shed afresh. 
In it He displays His wounds to His heavenly Father, to save man 
from perdition; He ?ets before Him the bitter anguish He endured 
at His death as vividly as if His Passion were but just ended. To 



549 TJie Means of Grace, 

say Mass therefore, is to immolate the Son of God anew in a mystic 
manner. The principal ceremonies of the Mass demonstrate, as we 
have seen, that the oblation once offered upon the cross is renewed 
upon the altar. 

2. In the sacrifice of the Mass all the sacrifices made by Our 
Lord are also renewed. 

In the Mass Christ does not only sacrifice His humanity, as upon 
the cross, but with it He offers all that He did and suffered during 
the thirty-three years of His life on earth, placing it all forcibly 
before the Holy Trinity, though with all lowliness. The prayers 
which He sent up to heaven while on earth are all repeated and 
summarized, as it were, in the Mass, and presented to God the Father 
with the same urgency as if they were but just uttered. All this He 
offers for the salvation of each individual who is present at the Mass. 
Our Lord said once to St. Mechtilde : " I alone know and fully under- 
stand how I offer Myself daily upon the altar; it surpasses the com- 
prehension of the seraphim and cherubim, and all the heavenly 
hosts." 



6. THE PROFIT TO BE DERIVED FROM THE HOLY 
SACRIFICE OF THE MASS. 

1. By means of the holy sacrifice of the Mass the fruits of the 
sacrifice of the cross are applied to us in most abundant measure; 
more particularly we obtain thereby forgiveness of sin, certitude 
that our prayers are heard, temporal blessings, and eternal re- 
wards. 

Every Mass is productive of the same fruits, the same profit to the 
soul as that which resulted from the death of Our Lord on Good 
Friday. And since the sacrifice of the Mass is identical with the 
sacrifice of the cross, it follows as a necessary consequence that its 
effects are the same (Cochem). The death and Passion of Christ are 
the treasury, the Mass is the key that unlocks it. The cross is the 
tree of life laden with celestial fruits, and by the Mass those fruits 
are given to us. In the sacrifice of the Mass we are made partakers 
of the merits of Christ; they are, it is true, applied to us by the 
other means of grace, but far less freely and abundantly. At the 
time of Mass God gives lavishly ; from no other source do the streams 
of grace flow so copiously as from the altar. In the Mass, the Son of 
the most high God comes down from the gardens of paradise, bringing 
to us from thence celestial riches and treasures of infinite value. In 
the Mass the heavenly Father gives us His Son ; " and hath He not 
with Him, also given us all things?" (Rom. viii. 32.) If you, O 
Christian, knew how to profit by the Mass, by it you might become 
richer than all the creatures of God can make you ! One must be 
in a state of grace in order to receive most of the sacraments, other- 
wise one cannot share in Christ's merits, and one incurs the guilt of 
mortal sin ; but it is not necessary to be in a state of grace to hear 
Mass; the sinner does not commit a fresh sin by doing so; on tha 
contrary he gains the grace of conversion. 



Tlie Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 543 

1. The forgiveness of sins consists in this: Through the sae- 
rifice of the Mass sinners obtain the grace and gift of penitence 
(Council of Trent, 22, 2), while the just obtain the remission 
of venial sin, and of the temporal penalty due to sin. 

That remission of sin is effected by the Mass, we learn from Our 
Lord's words when He consecrated the chalice (Matt. xxvi. 28). The 
Mass is above all a propitiatory sacrifice; thereby it is differentiated 
from the Old Testament sacrifices. They only cleansed from legal 
impurities, not from sin (Heb. x. 1) ; the oblation of the New Testa- 
ment alone has power to remit sin (Heb. ix. 9). Upon the cross 
Christ cried: "Father, forgive them" (Luke xxiii. 34), and at Mass 
He utters the same petition on behalf of all who are present. As the 
blood of Abel cried to heaven for vengeance, so the blood of Christ 
calls to heaven in the Mass for mercy, and the voice of His well- 
beloved Son has more power with God than that of Abel had (Heb. 
xii. 24). In the Mass Christ is our Advocate with the Father, the 
propitiation of our sins (1 John ii. 1). Our Lord once said to St. 
Mechtilde : " My condescension in the Mass is so great, that there 
is no sinner, however great, there present, to whom I will not gladly 
grant forgiveness, if only he asks Me for it." Just as men are pacified 
by a gift, and induced thereby to condone offences committed against 
them — remember how Jacob on returning home approached his 
brother Esau with a present, to allay his wrath — (Gen. xxxii. 20) — so 
God allows His anger to be appeased by the oblation of holy Mass. 
That holy sacrifice rescues the sinner from eternal perdition. As the 
sun disperses the clouds and makes the face of nature bright, so holy 
Mass gladdens the Church of God. The effect of holy Mass upon the 
sinner is not immediately perceived ; God brings about his conversion 
in an opportune moment, when his heart is open to the influence of 
grace. At the time of Our Lord's crucifixion few were moved to 
repentance ; not until Pentecost, when the hearts of many were soft- 
ened by the preaching of Peter, did the effect of the sacrifice of the 
cross become apparent. Many are gradually converted through divine 
grace, without knowing that this is owing to the power of holy Mass. 
The Holy Ghost acts upon the hearts of those who assist at Mass 
as He acted upon the centurion and some others who stood beside the 
cross of Christ, and who acknowledged : " Indeed this man was the 
Son of God." The lights about the altar are emblematical of the 
graces of the Holy Spirit, which are communicated in rich abundance 
to those who hear Mass devoutly. It would not be meet for one who 
had served at the table of a monarch to go away hungry, and it 
cannot be supposed that one who had heard Mass piously should be 
allowed to depart without spiritual nourishment. As when the mouth 
eats the whole body is refreshed, so the faithful communicate spirit- 
ually at the communion of the priest, although they do not actually 
receive the Lord's body. The just obtain remission of venial sin 
through the sacrifice of the Mass, because the treasures of the infinite 
satisfaction Our Lord made to His heavenly Father are offered for 
them in it. " Venial sins," says Cochem, " melt away at Mass like 
wax before the fire." The Council of Trent (22, 1), declares that by 
the sacrifice of the Mass we obtain the remission of the sins we daily 



544 The Means of Grace, 

commit. If, as St. Augustine asserts, one Our Father said from the 
heart will expiate the venial sins of a whole day, how much the more 
are they expiated by the holy Mass ? The Mass is also a sacrifice of 
atonement for sins of which we are not conscious. Father Cochem 
tells us that one Mass will do more to pay the temporal penalty due 
to sin than the severest penances. Moreover the divine chastisements 
are averted by holy Mass. When God sent a pestilence upon Israel 
during David's reign, and seventy thousand of the people died, the 
prophet told the sorrowing king to offer a holocaust and burnt-offer- 
ings to appease the ans^er of God. No sooner was this done than the 
plague was stayed. !N"ow if the sacrifice of oxen and sheep availed 
to arrest the divine judgments, what cannot the sacrifice of the Mass 
effect ? " If," says Cochem, " thou dost often hear Mass, thou mayst 
hope that thy purgatory will be short and not severe, because by fre- 
quently assisting devoutly at holy Mass, thou hast to a great extent 
expiated thy sins." Consider how quickly the penitent thief, who 
witnessed the sacrifice of Our Lord upon the cross, was admitted to 
heaven. 

2. The prayers we offer during Mass will surely be heard, 
because they are aided by the prayer of Our Lord and of the 
angels who are present. 

When we hear Mass, our prayers are strengthened by Our Lord's 
prayers, and His prayers are never offered in vain, for the Father 
heareth Him always (John xi. 42). The holy angels await the time of 
Mass, in order to proffer their petitions on our behalf with greater 
urgency and more hope of success. As the sacrifice of the Mass is 
more excellent than any other act of worship, so the prayers offered 
during Mass are more efficacious than any others. St. Francis of 
Sales says that prayers offered in union with the divine Victim have 
an inexpressible power; favors can be obtained at the time of Mass 
which can be obtained at no other. "Let him who is always com- 
plaining that he cannot pray aright," says Cochem, " go to Mass, that 
Christ may pray for him and instead of him, and supply what is 
wanting to his prayers." How foolishly those act who say at home the 
prayers they might say at Mass! 

3. Through the holy sacrifice of the Mass temporal blessings 
are obtained, especially these: God protects us from misfortune, 
assists us in our work, and blesses us in our temporal substance. 

He who has heard Mass devoutly will succeed in all things during 
the remainder of the day. The favorite servant of Queen Elizabeth 
of Portugal escaped apparently certain death through hearing Mass. 
St. Philip ISTeri was accustomed to offer the holy sacrifice before com- 
mencing any important undertaking, because he thereby insured its 
success. You are strengthened to meet the troubles of the whole day, 
if you have been near your Kedeemer in the morning at holy Mass. 
God assists those in their work who have heard Mass with devotion 
in the early morning. St. Isidore, a farm-servant at Madrid, used to 
rise daily at a very early hour, in order to hear Mass before going to 
his work. When his master, at the instigation of his fellow servants, 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 645 

blamed him for doing this, he replied : " If you find that I get through 
less work than the others, take something off my wages." The master 
observed him narrowly, and was soon convinced that Isidore did a 
great deal more than the other men, for an angel at his side assisted 
him in his labor; and thenceforward he did not attempt to hinder 
him from going daily to Mass. God also adds to the worldly posses- 
sions of those who make a point of hearing Mass. By increasing 
their property He gives them the occasion of earning more merits. 
He does not fail to recompense even unrepentant sinners who go to 
Mass. Since they are not in a position to receive an eternal reward, 
God, Who of His infinite bounty does not permit the. least good 
work to go unrewarded, either confers some good fortune upon them, 
or protects them from misfortune. 

4. We cannot obtain an eternal recompense through hearing 
Mass unless we are in a state of grace. 

" Every Mass thou hearest," says Father Cochem, " perceptibly in- 
creases thy future felicity." As one who is mounting a flight of 
stairs comes higher at each step, so he who hears Mass ascends one 
degree higher in heaven. The higher he mounts, the nearer he comes 
to God; the more clearly he knows Him, the more dearly he loves 
Him, the more ineffable is his enjoyment of Him. And for all the 
hardships you have to endure by reason of going to Mass, early ris- 
ing, exposure to cold, etc., you will be abundantly requited in heaven. 
A man who had given up going to Mass on week-days for some time, 
on account of the distance, once beheld in a dream an angel follow- 
ing him on the way to the church, and counting every step he took, 
in view of his future reward. After he had that dream, he again at- 
tended Mass regularly. How unwise are those who neglect the holy 
sacrifice of the altar ! The early Christians valued holy Mass aright, 
and were ready to lay down their lives rather than be deprived of it. 
What a responsibility for us, now that it is such an easy matter, that 
it costs us nothing to go to Mass. The burnt-offerings of the Jews 
were costly ; they were required to sacrifice at once a sheep and a goat, 
or if poor, two doves ; and we have an all-efficacious sacrifice without 
price. " Let us therefore go with confidence to the throne of grace " 
(Heb. iv. 16). 

2. Those who participate in the frnits of the holy sacrifice of 
the Mass are: First, the individual for whom it is celebrated; 
then the priest and all who are present; finally, all the faithful, 
both living and dead ; moreover the holy sacrifice gives joy to all 
the angels and saints. 

First and foremost, the individual for whom the Mass is said 
benefits most by it. The priest is at liberty to apply the actual fruit 
of the Mass to whomsoever he will. From time immemorial it has 
been customary in the Church to give a fixed sum to the priest, that 
he may say the Mass for a certain intention. The money is not given 
to pay for the Mass, for the value of the Mass is beyond all price, 
but as an alms towards the maintenance of the priest, and to defray 
the expenses of divine worship ; to pay the server, to purchase candles, 
etc. Tn early times the priest was not paid in money, but in kind; 



546 The Means of Grace, 

the people brought him wine, oil, bread, etc.; not until the Middle 
Ages did it become usual to give money. The amount to be given is 
fixed by the bishop ; it varies in different countries. No priest is al- 
lowed to ask more, unless the Mass is wanted at a very early hour, 
or a sung Mass is desired, or the priest has to go a long distance. The 
priest who celebrates Mass derives greater benefit from it than do 
those who hear it, because of his closer proximity to the Author of 
all grace. A monarch pays more attention to the envoy of his sub- 
jects than he would to one of the people who have deputed him to 
speak for them; and God, in like manner, regards the priest at the 
altar not as a sinful mortal, but as the ambassador empowered to 
speak in the name of the Church and as the representative of His 
Son; consequently his prayer has more power with God. All who 
are present at Mass are spiritually sprinkled with the blood of Christ. 
Could you see the beauty and the brilliancy of a soul thus sprinkled 
with His blood, you would be ready to fall down and adore it. By 
reason of the communion of saints, the whole Church is benefited by 
the holy sacrifice. It is an embassy to the Holy Trinity, bringing a 
gift of inestimable value. If a deputation from a town offers a 
present to their monarch, all the inhabitants take part in offering it. 
So all Christendom has its share in the Mass, although at the sacri- 
ficial act its representatives are few in number; on this account the 
priest says in the prayers of the Mass that he offers up this sacrifice 
€>i praise for the whole Church, for all who pay their vows to the 
eternal, living and true God (prayer after the Sanctus). Every 
priest offers the sacrifice of the Mass for the salvation of the whole 
world; without it, destruction would long ago have come upon the 
earth by reason of the multitude of man's transgressions. The 
faithful departed benefit more particularly by holy Mass. Our 
Lord's death upon the cross was of immediate profit to the dead, for 
He directly went down to limbo, to set free many who were there. 
It is the same now ; whenever a Mass is said, several souls are released 
from purgatory; the angels hasten to open for them the gate of their 
prison. Moreover the holy sacrifice gives joy to the angels and saints. 
Since the blessed desire above all things the glory of God and the 
salvation of mankind, they experience inexpressible delight when they 
see that in the Mass highest honors are paid to the Holy Trinity, 
and the spiritual welfare of man is powerfully promoted. The angels 
and saints also rejoice because their names occur in the holy Mass; 
they exult with the exultation of warriors who, having been compan- 
ions of their monarch in the fight, are not forgotten in the triumph 
of his victory. And if even from the Jewish sacrifices a most sweet 
odor rose up to heaven (Numb, xxviii. 2), how much more must this 
be the case with the oblation of Christ. The fragrance of His blood 
goes up on high to refresh and invigorate the blessed denizens of 
heaven. For this reason the angels descend from the realms above 
to assist at Mass; as on Christmas night they came down to Bethle- 
hem, singing songs of praise, to adore the new-born Infant in the 
manger, so now they stand around the altar at the time of Mass, be- 
cause the only-begotten Son of God is again made flesh. When God 
brought in the first begotten into the world, He said: "Let all the 
angels of God adore Him" (Heb. i. 6). Remember, when you hear 
Mass, that you are in the company of countless celestial spirits. 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 547 



7. TEE CELEBRATION OF HOLY MASS, 

1. The holy sacrifice of the Mass is only offered to God; it may 
be offered to Him with a fourfold intention; by way of atone- 
ment, of petition, of praise, or of thanksgiving. 

When we offer sacrifice, we acknowledge that He to Whom we 
offer it is the Author of all being, the sovereign Lord of all things, 
and that we consequently owe Him homage. The sacrificial act is 
therefore an act of adoration, which can be offered to no created 
being, be he saint or angel. No one has ever offered sacrifice except 
to the true God, or to one whom he erroneously supposed to be the 
true God. Under the Old Dispensation there were various sacri- 
fices : Sin-offerings, burnt-offerings, sacrifices of praise, etc. ; we have 
but one sacrifice, which answers all these ends. To make atonement is 
pre-eminently the object of the sacrifice of the Mass ; this is the chief 
intention for which it is celebrated. The sacrifice of the Mass has 
also an immense potency if we would ask for anything; no gift or 
favor is too great to be obtained by means of it. For what we im- 
plore is something finite, something created, whereas what we offer 
is something divine, something infinite. It cannot be imagined that 
God, Who is so generous that He richly rewards a cup of cold water 
given in His name, will not reward us when we offer Him the chalice 
containing the blood of His divine Son. St. Bonaventure says : " If 
a commander is taken prisoner, he is not liberated until a large sum 
has been paid for his ransom ;" now in holy Mass we can say : " Be- 
hold, O eternal Father, Thy only-begotten Son, Whom all the earth 
cannot contain, is now a prisoner in our hands ; we will not release 
Him until that which we earnestly implore of Thee has been granted 
to us for His sake." The holy sacrifice of the Mass is also a sacrifice 
of praise. That alone can be praised which is praiseworthy; the 
more good there is in a man, the more praise can be given to him. 
God is the supreme and infinite Good; all the creatures He has made 
cannot praise Him enough. " Glorify the Lord, exalt Him as much 
as you can, for He is above all praise " (Ecclus. xliii. 32). Yet there 
is one means whereby we can worthily praise God, and that is by the 
sacrifice of the Mass. Upon the altar Christ praises the Godhead 
as He ought to be praised, as neither angel nor saint, much less mortal 
man, is able to praise Him. One single Mass gives more glory to God 
than all the angels and saints in heaven are capable of rendering 
Him ; the glory given Him is as much greater as God is more exalted 
than His creatures (Cochem). In no way can God be more honored 
than by the spotless Victim upon the altar; Christ instituted the 
Mass for this end, to enable the Church to give glory to God. An- 
other intention for which Mass may be celebrated is to give God 
thanks. " If any one has done thee a kindness," says Cochem, " thou 
art bound to make him a fitting return, unless thou wouldst appear 
ungrateful." 'Now consider what countless benefits we have received 
from God; think how admirably He has made the earth, fashioned 
man; how He provides continually for our sustenance. Think, above 
all, of the work or redemption, the institution of the sacraments, 
and of the many graces He has conferred on us. Will we not 



548 The Means of Grace, 

say with Tobias: "What wages shall we give Him, or what can be 
worthy of His benefits ? " (Tob. xii. 2.) See, you have the sacrifice of 
the Mass ; therefore it is in your power to make a worthy return for 
the divine benefits. For as Our Lord gave thanks to God at the Last 
Supper, so He now gives thanks in the Mass ; and the thanksgiving of- 
fered by God is infinite, surpassing in value that of all angels and 
all mankind. If the whole company of heaven and all good men 
on earth were to unite with you in one unceasing act of thanksgiv- 
ing, you would not give God as much thanks as is rendered to Him 
in one Mass by His divine Son. How great is the love of God 
towards us ! l!^ot only does He lavish innumerable benefits upon us, 
but at the same time He places within our reach an excellent means 
of repaying worthily the great blessings we have received. 

2. The holy sacrifice of the Mass may also be offered in honor 
of the angels or saints. 

When we offer holy Mass in honor of the saints, it is the same 
as when a play is acted in honor of a prince. Although no allusion 
may be made in it to the prince, yet he accepts it graciously. Even 
so the blessed take special delight in the Mass when it is celebrated 
in their honor, although the Passion of Christ alone is re-enacted in 
it, and it is offered solely to God (Cochem). When offered in honor 
of the saints, the Mass is essentially a sacrifice of thanksgiving and of 
petition; for we give thanks to God for the graces bestowed on the 
saints, and beseech Him to grant us grace through their intercession. 
When Mass is celebrated with this intention, the accidental glory 
of the saints is increased, but not the degree of happiness they enjoy. 
St. Gertrude often had Mass said in honor of the saints, and they 
generally appeared to her to thank her. During the Mass she was 
permitted to see them shining in greater glory, arrayed in garments 
more resplendent. The renewed presence of her Son upon earth 
also gives the Mother of God a thousand times more joy than all the 
psalms, litanies, prayers, you could recite in her honor; and doubt- 
less she will show you special favor if you hear or celebrate Mass in 
her honor. 

3. The holy sacrifice of the Mass can also be offered for the 
souls of the departed, who have been members of the Catholic 
Church, and have not died in a state of mortal sin. 

The Comicil of Trent expressly declares that the sacrifice of the 
Mass may be offered for the dead (C. 22, 2). It is unquestionably 
true that the departed may be assisted by holy Mass; that God is 
thereby induced to deal with them more leniently than their sins 
deserve (St. Augustine). From the earliest ages of Christianity it 
was customary to offer the holy sacrifice for the faithful departed, 
and give them a memento in every Mass, as is done now after the 
consecration. Tertullian states that this was the practice of the 
apostles themselves. We know that Monica begged St. Augustine to 
remember her at the altar of God after her departure. " She was not 
concerned," says St. Augustine, " about the embalming or preparing 
of her body for burial ; she was not solicitous about her sepulchre or 
the monument to be raised to her memory ; her only anxiety was that 
intercession should be made for her at the altar." What a contrast 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 549 

to Christians in the present day! Holy Mass may not be publicly 
celebrated for non-Catholics, such as Jews and Protestants, after 
their death. " We cannot," says Pope Innocent III., " hold commun- 
ion after their death with those with whom we held no communion 
during their life." To offer the holy sacrifice for such persons by 
name, as we do for Catholics, would be out of harmony with Cath- 
olic teaching. It is, however, permitted to offer up holy Mass pri- 
vately even for non-Catholics, and it will avail them if they were free 
from mortal sin at the time of their death. 

4. The holy sacrifice of the Mass can, however, be offered for 
the living, whether Catholics or non-Catholics. 

Holy Mass may be said for the living; we know that it is well to 
pray for our brethren when we are present at the holy sacrifice, and 
in every Mass a memento is made for the living. Father Cochem 
tells us that prayer for others is far more efficacious if offered during 
Mass, and we can even obtain the conversion of sinners by saying 
Mass, or having Mass said for them. No better assistance than this 
can be given to the sick and dying. We may also offer the holy sacri* 
fice for unbelievers during their lifetime, because Christ died for 
all men, and the Church intercedes for infidels, e.g., on Good Friday. 
The greater the number of persons for whom a Mass is said, the less 
profit does each individual derive from it. For this reason priests 
are strictly forbidden to accept more than one gratuity for one Mass. 
From time immemorial Mass has been offered for individuals, for it 
could not be supposed that a Mass which is said for hundreds or 
thousands of people could profit each one as much as if it were said 
for him alone. 

5. iSTot the priest alone, but all the faithful who are present 
at Mass, may offer the holy sacrifice for a special intention. 

The people who are present when Mass is celebrated offer it with 
the officiating priest. The priest offers the sacrifice in his own per- 
son, the people offer it by his hands. Hence St. Peter speaks of 
Christians as a kingly priesthood (1 Pet. ii. 9), and the Jews of old 
were called a priestly kingdom (Exod. xix. 6). In the prayers of the 
Mass the priest includes the people with himself as those who offer 
the oblation {Orate Fratres) ; in fact the priest must of necessity 
have some one to offer it with him, for on no account is it permitted 
to say Mass without a server, who represents the people. And as 
those who assist at Mass are fellow-sacrificers with the priest, it fol- 
lows that their prayers have the same power as his. The faithful 
ought therefore, whenever they hear Mass, to offer it for some definite 
intention. This may be done either at the commencement of the 
Mass, or at the offertory, or immediately after the consecration. 
Take heed, O Christian, that in the Mass you frequently offer up 
the divine Victim to His heavenly Father ; the more often you do this, 
the more abundantly will you be enriched. Those who neglect thus 
to offer the holy Mass in word or in thought, lose much that they 
might gain. The due blessing of Mass does not consist in merely 
being present at it, but in uniting one's self in spirit to the priest 
who offers it. 



550 The Means of Grace, 



8. TEE VALUE OF THE SACRIFICE OF THE MASS. 

1. As the holy sacrifice of the Mass is an oblation of infinite 
value, to celebrate or to hear Mass is a good work which surpasses 
all other good works in excellence. 

An oblation is nothing else than a gift we offer to God. Now the 
value of a gift is proportionate to the dignity of the giver and the 
costliness of the gift. Thus it is with a sacrifice; the more holy the 
sacrificer and the more precious the victim, the greater is its im- 
portance in God's sight. Hence it is that the value of the sacrifice 
of the Mass is infinite, for the priest and victim are none other 
than He of Whom God the Father said : " This is My beloved Son, 
in Whom I am well pleased " (Matt. iii. 17). The glory given to God 
in the Mass is greater than that which accrues to Him from all the 
good works of the saints, for the glory they give Him is finite, whereas 
the glory He receives in the Mass is infinite; it is an honor paid not 
by angels or men, but by Christ Himself. " Christ alone," says 
Cochem, " knows the greatness of the divine majesty; He alone knows 
what is due to the Most High ; He alone is capable of rendering to the 
divine majesty the honor that appertains to Him; all that angels and 
men can do for the glory of God scarcely deserves notice in com- 
parison with what Christ does." 'No sacrifice is an act of such pro- 
found abasement as the sacrifice of the Mass, for in it the all-glorious 
Son of God abases Himself to the utmost upon the altar, making Him- 
self appear less than man. In presence of the sacrifice of the Mass, 
all the sacrifices of the Old Testament vanish as do the stars when the 
sun rises, for those sacrifices were only acceptable to God inasmuch 
as they foreshadowed the oblation of Christ on the cross, with which 
the Mass is identical. Therefore to hear or celebrate Mass is a good 
v/ork of greater excellence than any other. As the sun exceeds the 
planets in radiance and vivifying power, so to hear Mass devoutly 
is much more important, more profitable to us, than any other good 
work. " If," says St. Laurence Justinian, " you place all your good 
works, prayers, fasts, alms, mortifications in one scale, and a single 
Mass in the other, you will find the latter far outweighs the former." 
For by the practice of penance we offer to God gifts that are purely 
human, but when we hear Mass with due devotion, we offer Him 
gifts that are divine; we offer Him the body of Christ, the blood of 
Christ, the wounds of Christ, the Passion of Christ — nay, the only- 
begotten Son of God Himself. The Council of Trent declares that 
no more holy and divine act can be performed by the faithful than 
the sacrifice of the Mass. To hear Mass, as a good work, is more 
profitable than mental prayer, which is the highest form of prayer, 
because in meditation we represent to ourselves Christ as present, 
whereas in the Mass He is really present in person. 

2. Offering or hearing Mass has more value as a good work 
in proportion to the worthiness and devotion of priest and people. 

The sacrifice of the Mass has a twofold virtue. The one it has of 
itself, quite independently of the worthiness of the priest. By the 



Tlie Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 551 



sacrifice of the Mass the virtues of Christ's Passion and His merits are 
applied to our souls in a totally different manner to that of any other 
works. Hence a man in no wise loses the fruit of the holy sacrifice 
if it is offered for him by a priest who is unworthy. Just as the effi- 
cacy of the sacraments does not depend upon the character of the 
priest who dispenses, so the oblation of a bad priest has the same in- 
trinsic value as that of a good priest (St. Thomas Aquinas). Yet 
on the other hand, the Mass regarded as a good work performed by 
a believing Christian, has a secondary virtue which depends upon the 
sanctity and fervor of priest and people. The holier the priest, the 
more profound his devotion, the more acceptable is the sacrifice he 
offers, and the greater is the benefit accruing from it. Thus it is far 
preferable to hear the Mass of a good priest than of a careless one, 
for the piety and sanctity both of the minister himself, and the 
faithful who join with him in offering the sacred oblation, enhance 
its beneficial effect as a good work and incite those present to greater 
devotion. 



9. DEVOTION AT HOLY MASS. 

When we are conversing with any one, we give him our whole 
attention, and do not think of other people. So when we hear Mass, 
when we are in the presence of God, we should fix our thoughts on 
Him, and for the time forget everything else. This we should do all 
the more because to hear Mass is the highest and holiest act of wor- 
ship we can perform, and if we do this carelessly, it will be without 
benefit to ourselves. 

We ought to be very devout at Mass; that is, we ought to 
banish from our minds all that may cause distraction, and en- 
deavor to unite our supplications to those of the priest, especially 
in the three principal parts of the Mass. 

As it is only at the cost of great toil that miners extract precious 
stones from the bowels of the earth, so we cannot make the hidden 
treasures of grace contained in the Mass our own unless we take 
pains to assist at it with the utmost attention and devotion. 

1. Whispering, laughing, looking about at the time of Mass 
must be carefully avoided; moreover it is unseemly to come to 
Mass overdressed. 

It may be said of our churches, where God is present upon our 
altars, what God said to Moses out of the burning bush : " The place 
whereon thou standest in holy ground" (Exod. iii. 5). We gather 
from the indignation Our Lord manifested in regard to those that 
bought and sold in the Temple (Matt. xxi. 13), how abhorrent to Him 
is indecorous behavior in the house of God. The house of God is a 
house of prayer. You would not allow yourself to chatter and laugh, 
nor even to sit down in the presence of an earthly monarch; with 
how much greater awe and reverence ought you to behave in the 
presence of Him Who is above all kings and emperors, the Son of the 
most high God ! Seven hundred priests and Levites ministered in the 



552 Tfie Means of Grace, 

Jewish Temple of old; they slaughtered victims daily for the burnt- 
offerings; and all went on in silence so profound that it might have 
been imagined that one priest only was in the Temple. Alexander the 
Great once was offering sacrifice to one of the heathen gods ; a young 
nobleman stood by holding a lighted torch; before the function was 
ended the torch burned down and scorched his hand, but such was his 
reverence for the act of sacrifice that he would not allow himself to 
fling it away. How much more ought Christians to avoid everything 
that would disturb the solemnity of this sublime sacrifice ! The early 
Christians remained motionless at Mass, so that it was as still as if 
no one were in the church. It has always been customary to kneel 
during Mass, at any rate from the consecration until after the com- 
munion. A pious empress, who was in the habit of kneeling through- 
out the Mass, was once begged not to fatigue herself in this manner : 
" What,'* she replied, " would you have me sit in the presence of my 
Lord and God, when my servants do not venture to sit in my pres- 
ence ? " St. Elizabeth of Hungary used always to remove her crown 
while she heard Mass. Those who behave irreverently at the holy 
sacrifice deserve condign punishment; they certainly derive no profit 
from it. It is also most unseemly to come to Mass dressed to excess, 
in the height of the fashion. St. John Chrysostom animadverts 
severely upon women who apparently go to Mass to attract attention, 
and show off their fine clothes. " Thou popinjay! is this finery," he 
says, " befitting a contrite sinner, who comes to entreat pardon ? Such 
garments are more suitable for the ballroom than the church." St. 
Ambrose says the more admiration such persons gain from men, the 
more they are despised by God. Some Popes and holy bishops have 
ordained that women should come veiled to church: St. Paul seems 
to have made the same rule for his converts, remarking that nature 
provided them with a veil, by giving them long hair (1 Cor. xi. 5, 14). 

2. When assisting at the holy sacrifice, we ought to unite our 
supplications to those of the priest, but it is not necessary to use 
the same prayers as he does. 

Meditation upon Our Lord's Passion is the best method of 
hearing Mass, because in holy Mass the sacrifice of the cross is 
re-enacted, and it was instituted as a commemoration of the 
death of the Redeemer. 

Those do wrong who repeat the prayers of the Mass out of a 
prayer-book in a formal manner, with their lips, not with their heart. 
There is nothing reprehensible in refraining altogether from vocal 
prayer during Mass if we substitute for it mental prayer. Those 
who repeat vocal prayers must take care not to disturb others by 
whispering. The five sorrowful mysteries of the Rosary are a very 
suitable devotion for Mass, because Our Lord's Passion is thus set 
before us. 

It is well to have a little singing during Mass, as it is con- 
ducive to devotion, is in itself a praver, and promotes the glory 
of God. 

Sacred music is most useful in exciting devotion. St. Augustine 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 653 

says : " How many tears I have shed, when hymns and canticles were 
sung to Thee, O my God! What emotions were aroused within me, 
when the church re-echoed with sweet melodies ! Each note fell upon 
my ear like soothing balm, carrying conviction of Thy truth to my 
heart, and kindling within me the ardor of devotion." Music is, more- 
over, an efficacious prayer; it is a heartfelt and fervent prayer, for 
the feelings of the heart gain force when the voice expresses them in 
song. The Fathers of the Church cannot say enough in commenda- 
tion of the use of vocal music in church; they say that it appeases 
the wrath of God, drives away the spirits of evil, attracts the angels, 
and leads the Holy Spirit to visit the heart of the singers; that on 
the wings of song the soul is aided to soar on high, that the voice of 
song awakens in the mind a longing for heavenly things, that it melts 
the heart and causes the sinner to shed tears of contrition and com- 
punction. Vocal music is also an appropriate accompaniment to the 
sacrifice of the Mass ; for it affords a means of expressing and manifest- 
ing the intense feeling, the deep emotions evoked by an attentive con- 
sideration of what is being enacted upon the altar. And since it is in 
song that the heart gives vent to her inmost feelings most freely and 
touchingly, it is the most perfect and fitting means of honoring the di- 
vine majesty. As often as Holy Scripture speaks of giving glory to God 
by the lips of angels or saints, it is described as a sublime and exalted 
song of praise. Therefore vocal music may almost be said to be an inte- 
gral part of the solemn celebration of the holy sacrifice; the Church 
could more readily dispense with magnificent structures, rich coloring, 
costly vestments, precious vessels, than with singing, for it is the 
language in which utterance is given to her prayers. We read that 
at the Last Supper Our Lord and His apostles sang a hymn, after 
which they went out unto Mount Olivet (Matt. xxvi. 30). And we 
know, from the testimony of the earliest writers, that the Christians 
of primitive times were wont to sing during the celebration of holy 
Mass ; for the first Christian annalists employ the expression : " Sing 
to Christ a canticle of praise," as synonymous with offering the 
holy sacrifice. In the present day some parts of the Mass are ap- 
pointed to be sung by the priest. It is, however, important that the 
singing at Mass should be as far as possible in harmony with the 
prayers recited by the priest and with the festival of the day; for 
congregational singing is not a mere accompaniment to, an accessory 
of the Mass, but a means whereby the people take part in the service 
and join with the priest who officiates at the altar. But the singing 
should not be continuous, for this is disturbing to devotion. The 
Holy See has expressly forbidden the singing to go on during some 
parts of the liturgy, as at the consecration, and when benediction is 
given with the Blessed Sacrament. 

3. At the three principal parts of the Mass we should to a 
certain extent suspend our private devotions, and fix our attention 
upon what is done upon the altar. 

It is evidently the intention of the Church that we should dis- 
continue our private prayers or singing during the canon of the 
Mass and at the communion, as a bell is rung to call our attention to 
it. At the offertory the priest says: "We offer unto Thee, O Lord, 



554 TJie Means of Grace. 

the chalice of salvation," and the faithful ought on their part to make 
an act of offering, to verify his words. 

In the course of the Mass we are required to do as follows: 
When the priest commences the Mass, we should make the sign 
of the cross, and direct our intention. 

The priest also offers the Mass for a definite intention. Ask your- 
self for what intention you should offer the holy sacrifice. In some 
places it is customary for the people to stand when the priest goes up 
to the altar, as a mark of reverence to him as Christ's representa- 
tive. 

At the Gospel all stand up, out of respect for the word of 
God; we should at the same time cross ourselves on forehead, 
lips, and breast, to testify our belief in, and our readiness to 
confess and follow the teaching of the crucified Eedeemer. 

At the offertory we ought to offer to God the oblations upon 
the altar, ourselves, and all that we possess. 

At the Sandus we ought to give praise to God, and hail the 
coming of the Son of God Who is about to descend upon the 
altar. The words of the Sandus are like the thrice holy of the 
angels (Is. vi. 3), and the cries of the people at Our Lord's entry 
into Jerusalem (Matt. xxi. 9). 

At the consecration we ought to kneel and adore the Re- 
deemer Who comes down from heaven upon the altar. 

Imitate at the consecration what you see the priest do ; he falls upon 
his knees, and reverently adores the Lord and God Whom he holds in 
his hands. Do as the three kings did in presence of the Infant Christ, 
or as the apostles on Mount Thabor. When the priest elevates the 
Host, look upon it with veneration; Our Lord once revealed to St. 
Gertrude that those who did so would have greater joy hereafter in 
the contemplation of God. If looking upon a brazen serpent in the 
wilderness brought healing (ISTumb. xxi. 9), what must it not do for 
us to gaze in faith upon the sacred Host! It is not well to drop 
one's head immediately, as if one would hide one's self. For what 
purpose does the priest elevate the sacred Host and hold it up on 
high but that we may behold it ? Every one should remain perfectly 
silent, in trembling awe, when the King of kings comes to be immo- 
lated for the faithful and given to them as their spiritual sustenance. 
Before Him the choirs of angels move, covering their faces, singing 
songs of praise with great jubilation. " The Lord is in His holy tem- 
ple; let all the earth keep silence before Him" (Hab. ii. 20). Some 
people keep cold and unmoved at the consecration, just as if Our 
Lord were not present ; they are like a man who, when a friend comes 
from a distance to visit him, does not so much as bid him welcome 
on his arrival, but leaves him standing as if he were a stranger. The 
whole court of heaven makes preparation for the consecration, and 
we miserable mortals look on with indifference, scarcely seeming to 
heed v/hat is enacted upon the altar. Oh! did God but open the 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 555 

eyes of our soul, what marvels would be disclosed to our spiritual 
sight ! But because we do not perceive with our senses the abasement 
of the Son of God, we think little of it, whereas the angels gaze on 
it with trembling. 

4. It is an excellent practice immediately after the consecra- 
tion to make to our heavenly Father a definite act of offering of 
His divine Son sacrificed upon the altar, and of His Passion and 
death. 

The priest officiating at the altar recites a prayer of offering. We 
may use some such words as these : " I offer Thee, O heavenly Father, 
Thy well-beloved Son, here present upon the altar; I offer Thee His 
sufferings and cruel death, beseeching Thee to have compassion upon 
the souls in purgatory " (or any other intention, such as the recovery 
of a sick person, or in thanksgiving for favors received). How 
pleasing it is to the eternal Father, when you honor Him in this man- 
ner! How rich a return will He make for the gift you present to 
Him! If any man possessed the whole world, and offered it to al- 
mighty God, he would not give Him so great a gift as when he 
humbly offers to Him His beloved Son in the Mass. The power of 
Christ's precious blood is all-prevailing to appease the wrath of God; 
by it we can obtain the conversion of sinners and the deliverance 
of souls from purgatory. Even the most grievous sinner may hope 
to obtain pardon, if he offers up the Passion and death of Christ to 
His divine Father. This may be done at other times than at Mass, 
but with less efficacy. 

5. At the communion if we do not communicate actually, we 
ought to do so spiritually. 

The early Christians conmiunicated daily ; but now few Christians 
lead so perfect a life as to be able to communicate daily. When the 
priest gives the blessing we should cross ourselves, at the same time 
imploring the blessing of God and giving thanks for the graces we 
have received. At the Last Gospel we should do the same as at the 
first. 

6. It is not possible to hear two or more Masses at the same 
time; therefore when in church we ought to follow one Mass 
attentively, and not more than one. 

We should endeavor, if we are present when several Masses are 
being said, to hear the one which is said where we can see it best, and 
follow that alone. In some dioceses it is the rule that if several 
Masses are celebrated simultaneously, the bell should be rung at one 
altar only, and that the principal, or at any rate the most conspicuous 
one. Yet though we cannot hear more than one Mass at the same 
time, if we are where several are being said, we profit in a certain 
measure by all, since every priest prays for all who are present. 



556 The Memis of Grace, 



10. THE OBLIGATION OF HEARING MASS, 

1. Every Catholic is bound, under pain of mortal sin, to hear 
the whole of one Mass devoutly every Sunday and holyday of 
obligation. 

(See the second commaiidmeiit of the Church.) 

1. Those persons who could not go to church without great 
injury to themselves, or who have some urgent work of mercy 
to perform, are excused from hearing Mass. 

Those are dispensed from hearing Mass who by going to church 
would incur serious personal injury. Thus the sick who cannot go 
to church are excused, likewise those whose health is so delicate that 
they cannot go without at least the risk of falling ill; or those who 
by going would be in danger of being set upon by ruffians; others 
again who live more than three miles from a church, or at too great 
a distance to go in bad weather. A king once observed that on a 
stormy December morning the church was almost empty, whereas 
in the evening, though the snow was falling heavily, the theatre was 
crowded. "Alas," he exclaimed, "people are ready enough to make 
sacrifices for pleasure, but for God they will make none." Working- 
people are also excused if they would lose their employment by leav- 
ing their work to hear Mass, or they may stay away occasionally, if 
by going they have great disagreeables to put up with from the people 
they live with, though they should endeavor rather to bring them to 
a better mind. One member of a household may remain at home to 
keep the house; those, again, are excused from attendance at Mass 
who have works of mercy to perform, such as nursing the sick, taking 
care of young children, preparing the meals for other inmates of the 
house, etc. 

2. We have not heard a whole Mass, unless we have been 
present in the church during the three principal parts of one 
and the same Mass. 

It is requisite to be present at the three principal parts of the 
Mass ; if one of these is omitted through negligence, the obligation is 
not fulfilled; if, for instance, we do not come in before the offertory, 
or if we leave before the communion. It does not suffice to hear one 
Mass from the consecration to the end, and another from the com- 
mencement to the consecration. What Christ has joined together, 
let not the Christian put asunder. He who comes in after the 
offertory must stay for the whole of another Mass. Moreover one 
must be present inside the church; it will not suffice to sit or stand 
outside, unless the church should be so overcrowded that it is im- 
possible to get inside. How potent is the prayer of an assembled 
multitude; for where two or three are gathered together in Christ's 
name, there is He in the midst of them (Matt, xviii. 20). St. John 
the Almoner, Patriarch of Alexandria in the seventh century, 
put a stop to the bad habit his flock had contracted of remaining out- 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 657 

side during Mass-time. One Sunday, instead of vesting for Mass, 
he went out and sat with the people outside the church, to their great 
astonishment. " Where the sheep are, there the shepherd must be," 
he observed. " While you stay here, I shall do the same ; if you go 
in, I will go too." After this rebuke no one was to be seen outside the 
church at Mass-time. 

3. Those only can be said to hear Mass devoutly who banish 
from their mind all that may cause them distraction, and who 
unite their petitions to those of the priest, especially at the three 
principal parts of the Mass. 

4. It is permissible to assist at the holy sacrifice of the Mass 
on Sundays and holydays in any church; but it is desirable to 
go to one's parish church. 

The Council of Trent admonishes the faithful to be frequent in 
their attendance at their parish church, at least on Sundays and the 
greater festivals. On those days the priest offers the holy sacrifice 
for all his parishioners, both living and dead, and adapts his sermons 
to the needs of his fiock ; furthermore in the parish church notices are 
given out of marriages, of fast days, of ecclesiastical festivals and 
ordinances. The faithful ought to become acquainted with their 
parish priest, who is their pastor and spiritual father, in the house 
of God. There is however no law which makes it binding upon 
Catholics to hear Mass in their parish church. 

2. To hear Mass on week-days, if possible, is a highly com- 
mendable practice, for it may be the means of gaining the greatest 
graces. 

If the holy sacrifice were celebrated in only one place in the world, 
and offered only by one priest, with what longing would Christian 
people hasten to that spot! But now that there are many priests, 
and Christ is daily offered up in many places, how much is our luke- 
warmness and negligence to be deplored, which has thereby arisen 
(Imitation, Book iv., ch. 1). Some people consider the half hour they 
take from their work to hear Mass as a loss of time ; this is, however, 
not so, for they do their work better and more quickly through having 
been to Mass. Has not Our Lord said : " Seek first the kingdom of 
God and His justice, and all these things shall be added unto you " 
(Matt. vi. 33) ? " If," says Cochem, " a shower of gold fell from the 
clouds, thou wouldst surely leave thy work and hasten into the street 
to gather up the coins. Only a fool would stop indoors. And thou 
art a fool if thou dost through indifference or negligence omit to hear 
Mass, when a stream of heavenly treasures is poured out from on high. 
Through neglecting holy Mass one loses far more than one would gain 
by a whole day's work. Arrange thy business therefore, if thou canst, 
so as to allow of thy hearing Mass daily. And if it is impossible for 
thee to go thyself, give an alms to some poor person to hear Mass for 
thee; he will do so gladly, and thou wilt reap the greater benefit." 
For, as is the case with every good work, we may apply to others the 
merit of hearing Mass without being losers ourselves. For the priest, 
in the canon of the Mass, supposes that those who are present who 



558 The Means of Grace. 

■vnth him offer up the holy sacrifice, do so for their families and 
friends as well as for themselves. Do not allow human respect to 
keep you from serving Christ, for if you are ashamed of Him, He will 
also be ashamed of you (Luke ix. 26). When King Louis of France 
was told that people talked about his habit of hearing one or even 
more than one Mass daily, he replied : " How careful people are about 
my time ; if I spent twice as long at play or out hunting, they would 
not have a word to say about it." The Blessed Thomas More was 
accustomed to say, in connection with hearing Mass daily, that he 
esteemed it his greatest honor to render that mark of respect to the 
King of kings. 



11. THE TIME WHEN MASS IS TO BE CELEBRATED. 

1. The holy sacrifice of the Mass is generally to be celebrated 
between sunrise and noon, and at midnight on Christmas Eve. 

Mass may be said before sunrise under exceptional circumstances, 
such as the priest's going on a journey, or in order to give working- 
people the opportunity of hearing Mass before commencing the day's 
labor; or it may happen that after the consecration of a church, or 
a confirmation, the holy sacrifice is not commenced before twelve 
o'clock (noon). The early Christians celebrated Mass at night, in 
order to escape the persecution of the heathen. And in later years it 
was customary to offer the holy sacrifice during the night several 
times in the course of the year; at Christmas, on Holy Saturday, 
on St. John Baptist's Day, and on Ember days. 

2. On Sundays and holy days of obligation the holy sacrifice 
of the Mass is offered at a convenient hour in all parish churches, 
and almost always on week-days also. 

Every Catholic priest is bound to say Mass on Sundays and holy- 
days (Council of Trent, 23, 14). Those who have the care of souls 
are, in virtue of their office, under the obligation of offering the holy 
sacrifice every Sunday and holyday for their parishioners, both living 
and dead. These Masses which are binding on those who have the 
cure of souls are called parochial Masses, and must be said at the 
hour when the parishioners are best able to come to church. 

3. No priest may, as a rule, say Mass more than once daily ; 
but on Christmas Day and on All SouPs Day all priests are 
allowed to say three Masses. And by the permission of the 
bishop some parish priests who have a large congregation are 
allowed to duplicate, that is, say two Masses on the same day. 

In the commencement of the Middle Ages it was customary for 
priests sometimes to say one Mass after another, but this gave rise to 
many abuses. By a decree of Pope Innocent III. the clergy were for- 
bidden to say more than one Mass daily, except on Christmas Day, 
when three might be said. It is not, however, obligatory on priests to 
say three Masses on Christmas Day, any more than it is upon the 
laity to hear three. Priests who have a large parish obtain permission 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 559 

from the bishop to duplicate, if the church is too small for all the 
parishioners to hear one and the same Mass. 

On the other hand no priest may say Mass on Good Friday. 
And on Holy Thursday and Holy Saturday only one solemn 
Mass is to be celebrated in the parish church. 

The only exception to this rule is made when the feast of the 
Annunciation falls on Thursday in Holy Week. If it falls on Good 
Friday or Holy Saturday, it is transferred to the Monday in Low- 
Week. 



12. THE PLACE WHERE MASS IS TO BE CELEBRATED. 

1. The apostles offered the holy sacrifice on a table in a 
dwelling-house. 

(See Acts ii. 46; Col. iv. 15.) To this day the table whereon St. 
Peter offered the holy sacrifice may be seen in the Church of St. John 
Lateran in Eome. The Council of Nice (325), speaks of the holy 
table on which the priest immolates without bloodshed the Lamb of 
God, Whose body and blood is the spiritual food of Christians. A 
table was used because it was on a table that the holy Mass was in- 
stituted by Our Lord on Holy Thursday; that table, made of cedar- 
wood, is still preserved in Rome. Another reason for using a table 
was that it could be easily hidden or removed in times of persecution. 

2. In the time of the great persecution of the Christians, 
the holy sacrifice was offered on the tombs of the martyrs in 
subterranean passages (the Catacombs). 

It is from this that the altar to this day has the form of a tomb, 
and that relics of the saints are deposited in it. Another reason 
why relics are placed in the altars is to denote the communion we 
hold with the saints in heaven, and it is on account of the relics being 
there that the priest frequently kisses the altar. When the Church 
had emerged from the Catacombs, the churches were erected by pref- 
erence upon the spots where the saints and martyrs were interred 
(witness St. Peter's in Pome), and eminent ecclesiastics were buried 
in the crypts. Hence arose the custom at funerals of having the body 
in the church when the requiem is sung. And the lights which are 
burned during divine worship date from the time when the Chris- 
tians assembled to hear Mass in dark, subterranean chambers. The 
burning lights also symbolize divine grace, which enlightens and 
vivifies, and which is communicated at no time so freely as during 
holy Mass. The candles upon tH altar signify, furthermore, the 
presence of Him Who is the Light of the world, the God-man, Who 
enlightens us by His word. 

3. When the period of persecution was over, the holy sacri- 
fice of the Mass was offered in churches upon altars of stone. 

In old times a table or mound was formed of stone, and decked 
as an altar. Noe, on coming out of the ark, built an altar, and the 



560 Tae Means of Graca, 

other patriarchs did the same. In the Temple at Jerusalem there were 
two altars, the altar of burnt-offering in the outer court, and the 
altar of incense in the sanctuary. Altars must be either composed 
entirely of stone, or a stone, blessed by the bishop and containing 
relics, must be let into the top. On this the chalice and paten are 
placed, to signify that Christ is the foundation and cornerstone on 
which the Church rests (Ps. cxvii. 22), and a threefold linen cloth 
must be spread upon the altar, both because Our Lord was wrapped 
in a linen cloth when He lay in the sepulchre, and also to absorb any 
drops of the precious blood that might perchance fall from the 
chalice. On every altar there must be a cross, because the sacrifice of 
the cross is renewed there, and also two candlesticks with wax 
tapers. The altar is generally placed so that the officiating priest 
looks towards the east; the reason of this is because when he cele- 
brates the Mass he lifts his heart and hands to Him Who is the 
source of spiritual light. The altar is raised, both to denote its 
dignity, to enable all who are in the church to see the ceremonies, 
and also because the great oblation of our redemption was offered 
upon an eminence visible from afar. 

Churches are usually built on a height, or in the centre of 
a township. The styles of ecclesiastical architecture are many 
and varied. 

A hill, or some eminence, use3 to be selected as the site of a 
church, because of old high places were considered sacred ; under the 
Old Dispensation God frequently manifested Himself to mortals on 
a mountain; Our Lord often withdrew to a mountain to pray, and 
the Temple of Jerusalem, the type of the Christian Church, wa& 
situated upon a mountain. On an eminence one is more disposed 
for prayer and recollection; one is further aloof from the noise of 
the busy world, one feels nearer to God. Christ Himself said His 
Church was to be built upon a rock, and He was crucified upon Mount 
Calvary. When churches are situated in the centre of a town or 
village, it should remind us that in the Blessed Sacrament the Good 
Shepherd loves to dwell in the midst of His sheep. The Church of 
St. Peter in Kome is the largest basilica in the world. 

Both the external and internal arrangements of churches 
are adapted to awaken and aid devotion. 

In regard to the exterior, the church is larger and higher than or- 
dinary dwelling-houses, because it is the house of the most high God. 
It looks toward the east, because it is destined for the worship of 
the Sun of justice. It is built in the form of a cross, because the 
sacrifice of the cross is re-enacted within its walls, and the doctrine 
of the Crucified preached. It has a spire, pointing to heaven, our 
home, to admonish us to "seek those things that are above" (Col. 
iii. 1). Bells are hung in the tower to summon us to divine worship 
or call us to prayer; the spire is surmounted by a cross, the emblem 
of salvation, whereby God is reconciled with man. The interior of 
the church is divided into three parts; the porch, where in former 
days the catechumens and penitents used to kneel, and which ought 
to remind us of the preparation necessary before entering the church : 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 561 

the nave, which is the part appropriated to the faithful, wherein, as 
in Noe's ark, they are saved from eternal perdition; and the choir, 
where the singers formerly sat, but which is now set apart for the 
clergy. It is separated from the body of the church by a rail or 
communion table. At the entrance of the church we see the holy 
water stoup, reminding us that we ought to approach God with pure 
hearts; in the interior is one or more altars; over the high altar is 
the tabernacle wherein the Blessed Sacrament is reserved, and before 
which the sanctuary lamp is kept perpetually burning, to symbolize 
the Light of the world there present. There are also pictures and 
statues of saints and angels, who assist unseen at the sacred offices, 
besides the font, and all the other furniture of a church, with which 
every Catholic is familiar. The " dim religious light " that pervades 
the building, owing to the colored glass of the windows, reminds us 
that here below we understand the things of God only in a dark man- 
ner. Those people who say that it is unnecessary to go to church, 
because they can say their prayers anywhere, should consider that 
in the churches Our Lord is actually present upon our altars, that 
the atmosphere of the sacred edifice disposes us to recollection, and 
that petitions offered there have more power than those offered else- 
where. 

The consecration of a church is performed by the bishop, 
but a church can, with the permission of the bishop, be em- 
ployed for divine service without consecration. 

By God's command Moses had to anoint the tabernacle with the 
oil of unction (Exod. xl. 9), and Solomon's Temple was dedicated 
by that monarch himself. When King Antiochus had profaned the 
Temple by setting up idols within it, it had to be cleansed and dedi- 
cated anew; this was the origin of the feast of the Dedication (1 
Mach. iv. 54). It appertains to the office of a bishop alone to con- 
secrate churches, but he may give leave for Mass to be said in any 
building set apart for the purpose. The principal ceremonies of the 
consecration of a church are as follows: The bishop first prostrates 
himself before the principal entrance, and recites the Litany of the 
Saints ; then rising up, he goes three times around the outside of the 
building, sprinkling the walls with holy water; each time that he 
passes the door he knocks upon it with his crozier; finally he makes 
the sign of the cross upon the threshold with the crozier to signify 
that nothing can resist the force of the cross, and enters the church, 
where he falls on his knees and invokes the Holy Spirit. He then 
draws the letters of the Greek and Latin alphabets upon the pavement 
of the church, which is strewn with ashes, to signify that all the 
nations of the earth are called into the Church of Christ; next he 
goes round the interior of the building three times, sprinkling the 
walls with holy water, and three times up the centre and across it; 
this is in honor of the Holy Trinity, and of the crucifixion of Christ; 
afterwards he anoints the walls in twelve places, where lighted 
tapers are affixed, in memory of the twelve apostles who spread abroad 
the light of the Gospel, and then proceeds to consecrate the altar. 
From time immemorial the anniversary of the dedication of a church 
formed a yearly festival in the parish, but abuses having crept in, 
one festival was appointed for the whole Church, the third Sunday 



^62 77ie Means of Grac^. 

in October, to be kept as the feast of the Dedication. If any grievous 
crime is committed in a church, such as murder, or suicide, and it 
is known publicly, the sacred edifice must be instantly closed and 
dedicated anew. This must also be done if a church is rebuilt, either 
wholly or to such an extent that the walls are in great part pulled 
down. Only under most exceptional circumstances, in time of war, 
or if a church is burned down, or at open-air festivals, may Mass be 
said outside the church, and express permission from the bishop 
must invariably be obtained. For saying Mass on board ship, the sanc- 
tion of the Holy See is necessary. On such occasions a portable 
altar, blessed by the bishop, is used ; that is, a square stone slab, large 
enough to admit of the chalice and Host being placed upon it. 



13. THE VESTMENTS AND SACRED VESSELS 
USED AT MASS. 

He who is granted an audience of an earthly monarch dresses 
himself in full dress out of respect to that monarch ; and the priest, 
when he appears before the King of kings at the altar, is arrayed in 
suitable vestments. These vestments show that he does not act of 
his own power, but as the representative of Christ. God Himself gave 
directions concerning the vestments which were to be worn by the 
priests under the Old Testament (Exod. xxviii. 4). The vestments 
to be worn by the Christian priests were prescribed by the apostles. 

1. The vestments which the priest wears in the celebration 
of Mass consist of (1), the amice; (2), the alb; (3), the girdle; 
(4), the maniple; (5), the stole; (6), the chasuble. 

The amice is a white linen cloth laid about the head and shoul- 
ders. Formerly it used to be placed over the head like a hood, to 
keep the priest from distractions at Mass. The alb is a white linen 
garment, reaching from head to foot. In the East it was customary 
to wear a white robe on festival occasions, as for instance, when in- 
vited to a wedding. In the parable of the marriage-feast. Our Lord 
makes mention of the "wedding garment" (Matt, xxii, 12). The 
girdle is a cord which fastens the alb together, so that it may not 
inconvenience the priest in walking. It is said of the young Tobias, 
when he was seeking a companion for his journey, that he found a 
young man, standing girded, as it were ready to walk (Tob. v. 5). 
Our Lord also says: "Let your loins be girt" (Luke xii. 35). The 
maniple was at first a linen cloth which was worn on the left arm, 
representing the cloth wherewith Our L^^rd's countenance was wiped. 
The stole is a long band of silk which hangs down from the neck and 
is crossed on the breast. It is the special sign of the sacerdotal 
office, therefore the priest wears it whenever he exercises his priestly 
functions. The chasuble is a garment which covers the priest before 
and behind, reaching down to the knees; in early times it was a kind 
of mantle, with only one opening, through which the head was passed, 
whence came the name casula, a little house. At other times than at 
Mass the priest wears a short alb or surplice, or a cope. At High 
Mass the deacon and sub-deacon wear special vestments, called dal- 
matics. 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 563 

2. The various portions of the sacerdotal vestments are com- 
memorative of Our Lord's Passion, and also serve to remind the 
priest of the duties of his office. 

The amice represents the cloth with which the soldiers muffled 
Our Lord's face when they struck Him ; the alb represents the white 
robe in which Herod arrayed Him in mockery; the girdle, the cords 
wherewith He was bound; the maniple, Veronica's handkerchief; the 
stole, the rope laid about Our Lord's neck after His condemnation; 
the chasuble, on the back of which is a cross, the cross He bore on His 
shoulders. The amice reminds the priest to observe custody of the 
eyes; the alb betokens purity of heart; the girdle, abstemiousness, 
purity, and self-control ; while the stole signifies his dignity as a priest, 
and the chasuble the heavy responsibilities that rest upon him. 

3. The principal things which are used in saying Mass are: 
The chalice, the paten, and the missal. 

The upper part of the chalice must be of gold, or silver, gilt in- 
side. The paten is a small plate, whereon the sacred Host is laid; 
it must be gold or silver-gilt. Both chalice and paten must be 
blessed by the bishop. The missal ©ontains the prayers that are said 
in every Mass, and those which vary according to the seasons and 
days of the ecclesiastical year. The ciborium somewhat resembles a 
chalice; it has a cover, and in it the consecrated Hosts are reserved 
for the communion of the faithful. The monstrance is sometimes used 
for the exposition of the Blessed Sacrament. Some worldlings are 
inclined to say as Judas did, when Magdalen anointed Our Lord's 
feet : " To what purpose is this waste ? " when they see the care and 
money expended by Catholics on the sacred vessels and furniture of 
their churches. They should, however, consider how greatly the 
beauty of God's house impresses the beholder and conduces to devo- 
tion ; and that it is, moreover, only right to give what is most precious 
and beautiful for the service of God. Why should the house of 
God be less richly adorned than the mansions of the wealthy ? 



U. THE COLORS OF THE VESTMENTS. 

The Jews made sacerdotal vestments of various colors by God's 
injunction for use in the Temple, white, scarlet and purple being the 
prevailing colors. Among the heathen the priests wore garments of 
dazzling whiteness, hence the Christians, who were converts partly 
from Judaism, partly from paganism, wished to provide similar col- 
ored vestments for divine worship. Besides, from the revelations of 
St. John, the Church learned that the celestial spirits who serve God 
in heaven standing about the throne, are arrayed in brilliant hues, so 
as to resemble a rainbow (Apoc. iv.). Thus the Church Militant imi- 
tates the Church Triumphant in the use of colors in her services. And 
again, as the face of nature changes with the varying seasons, so the 
different emotions evoked by the various seasons of the ecclesiastical 
year find expression in the use of different colors. 

1. In the vestments worn by the priest at Mass, the Church 
makes use of five colors: white, red, green, purple, and black. 



564 The Means of Grace, 

White is emblematic of innocence and purity, and of the eternal 
bliss to be enjoyed hereafter; red, the color of fire and of blood, be- 
tokens love and martyrdom. Green signifies hope, and violet or 
purple, faith and penance. Black is an emblem of death. 

1. White is the color used on the feasts of Our Lord, of the 
Blessed Virgin, of the angels, and of confessors. 

Christ is the Light of the world and perfect purity; the Mother 
of God was free from the stain of original sin. The angels dwell in 
everlasting light and perfect sanctity; the confessors let the light 
of their good works shine before men. On the nativity of St. John 
Baptist white vestments are worn, although he was martyred, be- 
cause he was sanctified before his birth. 

2. Eed is the color used at Pentecost and on the feasts of 
martyrs. 

At Pentecost the Holy Ghost, Who kindles the fire of charity in 
our hearts, came down upon the apostles in tongues of fire. The 
martyrs shed their blood for Christ, and thus manifested the great- 
ness of their love for Him. Ped is also used on the feasts of the holy 
cross, because Our Lord shed His blood upon the cross. 

3. Green is used on the Sundays after the Epiphany and 
after Pentecost on which nothing special is commemorated. 

On the Sundays after Epiphany the Church commemorates the 
youth of Christ, and His entrance upon His public ministry, which 
brought hope to the world; after Pentecost she celebrates her own 
springtime, the germination of the grain in the kingdom of God. 

4. Purple is used in Advent and Lent, and upon vigils and 
Ember days. 

Advent is the season in which faith looks for the coming of the 
Saviour; Lent is the time of fasting and penance. Purple is worn 
in administering the Sacrament of Penance, Extreme Unction, and 
Baptism, until after the anointing of the person to be baptized. 

5. Black is used on Good Eriday and at Masses for the dead. 

There is generally some white about black vestments, to indicate 
that the souls of the departed will soon enter upon eternal joys. At 
the obsequies of young children white is used because they die in 
innocence. 

2. These colors not only depict the course of Our Lord's life 
on earth, but serve as a constant admonition to us to lead a pious 
life. 

The colors in use in the Church, which, as we have seen, coincide 
with each event commemorated as it recurs in the cycle of the 
ecclesiastical year, are, besides, a continual lesson to the Christian. 
Let the white vestments remind you that the Church calls on her 
children to strive after holiness ; let the sight of the red kindle in you 
the love of God, while the green bids you raise your heart and fix your 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, 565 

hopes on heaven. The sight of the purple will remind you that you 
must do penance; the black will recall the thought of death, urging 
you to prepare for your last end and also to pray for your departed 
friends. 

15. TEE LANGUAGE OF THE MASS. 

In celebrating the holy sacrifice of the Mass the Church 
makes use of the Latin language. 

1. The Latin language is well adapted for the services of the 
Church, because it is both venerable and mysterious. 

The Latin language is venerable on accoimt of its origin and its 
antiquity; it is the language in which the praises of God resounded 
from the lips of Christians during the first centuries. It is a sublime 
and solemn thought that the holy sacrifice is now offered in the same 
language, nay, with the very same words as it was offered in times 
long past in the obscurity of the Catacombs. There is also an ele- 
ment of mystery about the Latin tongue; it is a dead language, not 
understood by the people. The use of an unknown tongue conveys 
to the mind of the vulgar that something is going on upon the altar 
which is past their comprehension, that a mystery is being enacted. 
In the first centuries of Christianity a curtain used to be drawn 
during the time from the Sanctus to the communion, to conceal the 
altar from the sight of the worshippers. This is now no longer done, 
but the use of an unknown tongue has something of the same effect, 
by inspiring awe into the minds of the common people. It is a 
striking fact that Jews and pagans made use, in the worship of the 
Deity, of a language with which the multitude were not conversant. 
The Jews m^de use of the ancient Hebrew, the language of the 
patriarchs; we do not find Gur Lord or the apostles censuring this 
practice. The Greek Church, both orthodox and schismatical, em- 
ploys the old form of the Greek language for divine service, not 
that spoken at present. The same language is in use in the Russian 
(so-called orthodox) Church, not the vernacular, which is a Slavonic 
dialect. 

2. The use of the Latin language in her services is most ad- 
vantageous for the Church; it serves to maintain her unity and 
preserve her from many evils. 

The use of Latin is a means of maintaining unity in the Church, 
as well as uniformity in her services, for the use of one and the same 
language in Catholic churches all over the surface of the globe, is a 
connecting link binding them to Rome, and making one nations which 
are separated by diversity of tongues. Latin, as the language of the 
Church, unites all nations, making them members of God's family, 
of Christ's kingdom. The altar on earth is a type of the heavenly 
Jerusalem where a great multitude of all peoples and tongues stand 
around the throne, praising God. If Latin were not the official 
language of the Church, deliberations and discussions among bishops 
assembled at the councils, the mutual exchange of opinions between 



566 The Means of Grace, 

theologians would be impossible. Moreover, the use of Latin, the 
language of ancient Rome, is a constant reminder of our dependence 
on the Holy Roman Church ; it recalls to our minds involuntarily the 
fact that thence, from the Mother Church, the first missionaries 
came who brought the faith to our shores. The use of a dead lan- 
guage is a safeguard against many evils; it is not subject to change, 
but remains the same to all time. Languages in daily use undergo a 
continual process of change; words drop out, or their meaning is 
altered as years go on. If a living language were employed in divine 
worship heresies and errors would inevitably creep into the Church, 
and sacred words would be employed in an irreverent or mocking 
manner by the unbeliever. This is prevented by the use of Latin, 
at any rate as far as the unlearned are concerned. Yet the Church 
is far from desiring to keep the people in ignorance of the meaning 
of her religious services; the decrees of the Council of Trent (22, 
8), strictly enjoin upon priests to explain frequently the mysteries 
and ceremonies of the Mass to the children in schools, and to adults 
from the pulpit. But as a matter of fact, it is by no means necessary 
for the people to understand every detail of the ceremonial of the 
Mass. " If," says St. Augustine, " there are some present who do not 
understand what is being said or sung, they know at least that all is 
said and sung to the glory of God, and that is sufficient for them to 
join in it devoutly." Moreover, experience teaches that the fact of 
the prayers being in Latin does not at all hamper or interfere with 
the devotion of the faithful, or lead them to absent themselves from 
the services of the Church. Besides, the sermons are always deliv- 
ered in the vernacular; it is often used at the opening services and 
to some extent in administering the sacraments. The reason why 
the whole of the Mass is in Latin is because it is a sacrifice, not an 
instruction for the people. The greater part of the prayers are said 
by the priest secretly, so that were they in the mother tongue, they 
would be inaudible to the people. Furthermore, the celebration of 
Mass consists more in action than in words. The actions of the 
priest, the whole ceremonial, speaks a language intelligible to all. 
And if, as some would wish, all the services were conducted in the 
language of the country, persons of another nationality, not con- 
versant with other languages, might be led to drop their religion on 
leaving their own land. Another evil consequent upon such a change 
would be a lessening of the respect felt for the holy sacrifice, as 
was proved at the time of the reformation, when the prayers of the 
Mass were, to a great extent, translated into German and English. 



16. SINGING AT MA8S. 

1. The singing of which the Church makes use as an accom- 
paniment to the Mass, is what is known as the Gregorian chant. 

This may be heard at High Mass, when the priest sings the 
preface or the Paier Noster, and when he begins the Gloria or Credo. 
This style of music is called Gregorian, because it was brought to 
perfection and introduced into general use by Pope St. Gregory the 
Great. It is believed that it was by divine inspiration or through 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 567 

direct revelation that the saint did so much in the interests of Church 
music. This chant is marked by extreme gravity, tranquil solemnity, 
majestic dignity. It is free from all rapid movements, florid passages, 
all striving after effect. It is the language of another, a higher 
sphere, it is truly the voice of prayer and of praise. In the Gregorian 
style special attention is paid to the text, the words of which are 
plainly audible; the beautiful, subdued melody holds a secondary 
place. This style of chanting is not hampered by restrictions of time 
and measure, and that gives it the irresistible power it possesses 
over the feelings, as an eloquent discourse carries away the heart. 
Gregorian music undergoes no change; like Latin, the language of 
the Church, it is always and everywhere the same. Hence it admira- 
bly corresponds to the nature and characteristics of the Church, par- 
ticularly her unity and universality. Many devout Christians prefer 
this style of singing to any other, because it is a stimulus to recollec- 
tion and devotion. 

2. In addition to the Gregorian chant we have in our 
churches congregational singing, hynms in which the people 
join. Instrumental music, as an accompaniment to the singing, 
is played on the organ, violin, or other musical instruments. 

Congregational singing had its origin in the first centuries, when 
the vernacular was the language of religion, and the people joined 
in some portions of the liturgy that was chanted. But when, in the 
fifth century, the Teutonic tribes overran Italy, and the national 
languages took a new form, and the people could no longer join in 
those parts of the liturgy which were sung in Latin, hymns to be sung 
in the vulgar tongue were introduced. The singing of hymns and 
canticles was more popular in Germany than elsewhere. Hymns full 
of sterling piety for processions, pilgrimages, and anthems in honor 
of Our Lady were composed and set to simple but splendid melodies. 
Luther was the ruin of Church music. He took advantage of the 
national love of psalmody and employed it as a means of propagating 
his erroneous tenets; it is said that he perverted more Catholics by 
his psalm-singing than by his preaching. The " chorales " to which 
he gave the principal place in divine worship were of so exciting a 
nature that it is said that while singing them, many a one felt himself 
urged to use his fists as well as his voice in spreading the new teach- 
ing. The Catholics of that period met Luther on his own ground; 
they too composed hymns in defence of the doctrines he attacked. 
This was the cause of a lamentable deterioration both in the spiritual 
songs themselves, and in the time and measure of the melodies to 
which they were sung, an effect which is felt to this day. Con- 
gregational singing during Mass should only be allowed in modera- 
tion, so as to leave every worshipper free to enter into the spirit of 
the holy mysteries, and not interfere with the private devotions of 
any one present. Instrumental music in churches enables us to lift 
up the heart to God with greater facility. Delight in the melody 
dispones the mind of the weaker brethren to deeper devotion, and is 
an aid in raising the thoughts from the natural to the supernatural. 
It must, however, be remembered that instrumental music is only an 
accessory; it is an accompaniment to vocal music, and serves to 



668 The Means of Grace. 

accentuate the words that are sung. In divine worship the simple 
words of prayer alone, or in their more solemn form of sacred music, 
are of main importance, because they are the outcome of the heart; 
the orchestral accompaniment is an accessory that can well be dis- 
pensed with. The playing ought never to drown the singing, or ren- 
der the words sung unintelligible. Still less ought the instrumental 
music be calculated rather to please the ear than to touch the heart 
and awaken pious emotions, for in that case it would be a hindrance, 
not a help to prayer. For the earthly-minded Jews instrumental 
music was necessary on account of their weakness; for only through 
the pleasures of the senses could they be stimulated to strive after 
nobler aims. In the early days of Christianity no instrumental music 
was heard at the time of divine worship, for the Christians would not 
have their prayers mingle with the notes of instruments which were 
associated with pagan dances and idolatrous ceremonies. Organs 
were first used in churches in the eighth century; in the sixteenth 
century, when kings and princes who were patrons of music had 
orchestras attached to their courts, we find instruments of various 
kinds, violins, flutes, etc., in the churches. Later on, professional 
bandmasters were engaged to conduct the choirs in churches, and 
unfortunately they introduced secular melodies into the house of 
God, and in the performance of these compositions no heed was paid 
to the sacred words of the liturgy. Among those who contributed 
most to the reform of Church music was Palestrina, the Papal choir- 
master in the Vatican; he composed several Masses of a solemn and 
dignified character, in which due prominence was given to the words. 
His name is immortalized by the Missa Papce Marcelli. A contem- 
porary of his of Dutch origin, Orlando di Lasso, choirmaster of the 
Lateran Church in Rome, asserted himself in the same direction. 
He was called the " king of composers," and was the author of eight 
hundred secular oompositions, besides fifteen hundred sacred 
works. The finest of the latter is the seven penitential psalms 
arranged for five voices, in which the feelings of penitence and com- 
punction are expressed in a masterly manner. Gabrieli, organist of 
St. Mark's in Venice, and Allegri, are also celebrated composers. The 
Miserere (for Holy Week), written by the last named, with nine 
parts and a double score is much esteemed. These masters promoted 
vocal music without an accompaniment, more than instrumental 
music, for which they did little. Instrumental music owes much to 
the composer Bach, a native of Eisenach (1750), whose sacred 
music is distinguished by its serious, religious tone. Towards the 
close of the eighteenth century instrumental music was brought to 
great perfection by Haydn, an Austrian, who composed fifteen Masses ; 
he died in 1809 in Vienna; Mozart, a native of Salzburg, who at* 
tracted attention as a boy by his musical talent, composed fifteen 
Masses before he was eighteen years old; he died at the age of 
thirty-five in Vienna; and Beethoven, a native of Bonn, who wrote 
two Masses of prodigious length; he died in 1827 in Vienna. The 
works of these composers cannot be considered as models of what 
sacred music ought to be ; they do not reflect the spirit of the Church 
in the Gregorian music. They may express feelings of devotion, 
otherwise they differ little from secular compositions, and bear 
the stamp of the age in which they were written. In recent times 



The Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. 569 

much has been done for the improvement of Church music by the 
Society of St. Cecilia, founded in 1867 at Regensburg, the object 
of which is to train choirs, to raise congregational singing to a higher 
level, and introduce instrumental music of a nature to correspond 
with the liturgy of the Church. The rules of this Society were con- 
firmed by Pope Pius IX. in 1870. 



17. HEARING THE WORD OF GOD. 

At the miraculous multiplication of the loaves. Our Lord caused 
the bread to be distributed to the people by His disciples (Matt. xv. 
36). And now He employs His ministers to dispense to the faithful 
the spiritual bread, the word of God. This bread is given to them 
freely (2 Cor. xi. 7). 

1. The word of God is said to be the food of the soul, because 
it sustains the life and strength of the soul, as bread does that of 
the body. 

The Fathers of the Church speak of the word of God as the food 
of the soul. Our Lord Himself says : " 'Not in bread alone doth man 
live, but in every word that proceedeth from the mouth of God" 
(Matt. iv. 4). The manner in which the word of God acts upon the 
soul is by enlightening the understanding and inciting the will to 
do what is good. In the darkness of this life it shows us the path to 
heaven, as a lantern enables the traveller to find his way by night. 
The word of God reveals to us the stains upon our soul, as a mirror 
shows us the marks upon our countenance. When St. Augustine had 
attended the sermons of St. Ambrose at Milan, he said : " That man 
opened my eyes." The word of God stimulates the will to what is 
good. The fable tells us that Orpheus played the lyre with such a 
wonderful charm, that the sounds he drew from it fascinated the 
most savage mortals, tamed wild beasts, and even recalled the dead 
to life. This is true of the word of God; by it whole nations sunk 
in heathendom, degraded below the level of the beasts, have been 
converted, and civilized, and rescued from eternal death. St. 
Anthony the hermit embraced the life of an anchorite in consequence 
of having heard a sermon on Our Lord's words to the rich young 
man. " Are not My words as a hammer that breaketh the rock in 
pieces ? " ( Jer. xxiii. 29.) The word of God strikes the heart like 
a thunderbolt. The thunder of the divine menaces awakens those 
asleep in sin, indifferent as to their salvation. The word of God 
banishes sin. " It acts on the soul," says St. Jerome, " as a plough 
on the soil, loosening the hardened surface, rooting up the thistles of 
vice." The word of God kindles the flame of charity in the heart 
of man ; like fire, it consumes the rust of sin, it promotes the growth 
of virtue; or it may be compared to the gentle rain that cometh 
do'v^Ti from heaven to soak the earth and water it, and make it to 
spring, and give seed to the sower and bread to the eater (Is. Iv. 10). 

He who shows indifference towards the word of God exposes 
himself to the risk of spiritual death and eternal damnation. 



570 The Means of Grace. 

Just as a man who refuses to take food will surely die, so those 
who do not hear the word of God, which is the food of the soul, incur 
spiritual death. In this life we are travellers on the long and dan- 
gerous journey from time to eternity; and as the traveller who walks 
by night without a lantern strays from the right road, so we shall not 
reach the end of our journey without the light of God's word to 
illumine our mind and guide us to our final end. The word of God 
is the sun of the soul, without which the spiritual life will droop and 
fail, as nature would if deprived of the vivifying warmth and radiance 
of the sun. 

2. Hence it is the duty of every Christian either to hear ser- 
mons frequently, or to read spiritual books and make a practical 
application of what he hears or reads. 

The Council of Trent orders that there should be a sermon in 
every parish church on Sundays and festivals. As it has long been 
customary to have the sermon after the Gospel, all who go to Mass 
on those days hear a sermon as a matter of course. Consequently 
there is no special injunction to hear sermons. Preaching was the 
principal occupation of Our Lord and the apostles (Luke iv. 43; 
Mark xvi. 20), and the greatest saints have generally been able and 
zealous preachers. The preached word has more force and effect than 
what is read in books. The Bible history, the lives of the saints, or 
books of meditation are much to be recommended ; these are preachers 
to whom we may listen at any hour. Spiritual books are a mirror 
in which we discern our own feelings, and the virtues of which we 
stand most in need. Experience shows how much good may be done 
by reading them; witness the well-known conversion of St. Ignatius 
Loyola, or of St. John Columbinus, a nobleman and burgomaster of 
Sienna. One day, returning home from the town-council at noon, 
he found dinner was not quite ready. His wife gave him a volume 
of the lives of the saints to while away the time of waiting; at first 
he threw it aside, but presently opening it, he read the history of St. 
Mary of Egypt. This touched him so deeply that he became a 
changed man; from thenceforth he led an austere and saintly life. 
If we would profit by what we read, we must read with deliberation, 
and not too much at a time; and above all, be careful in the choice 
of books. Many books are like fungi, not food, but poison ; " evil com- 
munications corrupt good manners" (1 Cor. xv. 33). Moreover one 
must make a practical application of what one hears or reads. As 
food only nourishes the body when it is properly digested, so the word 
of God does not profit the hearer unless it be received into the heart 
and meditated upon. And as when we have been walking in a beautiful 
garden, inhaling the perfume of the flowers, we like to take away 
with us a few fragrant blossoms, so after spiritual reading we should 
retain a few thoughts as a spiritual bouquet to refresh us during the 
day. Unfortunately people do not think over what they hear or read ; 
they are like a man who beholds his own countenance in a glass and 
goes his way, presently forgetting what manner of man he is (Jas. i. 
23, 24). This is so because either they are distracted by worldly 
cares (the seed falls on the wayside), or they are prejudiced against 
the word of God (the seed falls upon a rock), or their hearts are full 



'ITie Holy Sacrifice of the Mass» 671 

of corrupt inclinations and unruly passions (the seed falls among 
thorns) (Luke viii.)- 

To apply the word of God to another, not to one's self, is 
reprehensible; or to listen to a preacher as the Pharisee did, 
merely in a critical spirit; or again to refuse to obey the word 
of God, because the example of the preacher does not correspond 
to his teaching. 

We ought to apply the sermons we hear to ourselves. Some are 
so busy in apportioning what they hear to others, that they leave 
nothing for themselves. It is recorded in the life of St. Anthony 
of Padua, and those of other saints, that when they preached against 
the follies of the day, gambling and love of dress, men brought their 
cards and dice, women their cosmetics and finery, and burned them 
in the presence of the preacher. It is not eloquence, but truth, that 
should attract us in a preacher. If we listen to the simplest discourse 
in a docile spirit, we are sure to learn something from it. Others will 
not obey the word of God because the preacher does not practise what 
he teaches. St. Augustine compares those who will not follow the 
counsels of a preacher because he himself does not act upon them, to 
travellers who, coming to a wooden guide-post, will go no further on 
the road pointed out to them because the guide-post itself is station- 
ary. The preacher is but the instrument of which the divine husband- 
man makes use to sow His celestial seed. Look not at the poverty of 
the vessel containing the seed, but at the excellence of the grain, and 
the majesty of the husbandman. 

3. Those who are assiduous in hearing sermons or reading 
spiritual books, will not have great difficulty in attaining eternal 
salvation. 

Our Lord says : " He that is of God, heareth the words of God " 
(John viii. 47). "Blessed are they who hear the word of God, and 
keep it " (Luke xi. 28). We delight to hear men speak of those whom 
we love; therefore, if we rejoice to hear of God, we must have the 
love of God in our hearts, and those who have divine charity are in 
a state of grace. Appetite is a sign of health; so the desire for 
spiritual nourishment is a sign that the soul is in a healthy condition, 
that is, in a state of grace. A disgust for food shows the body to be 
sick, and a distaste for the word of God indicates a bad state of the 
soul. 

The profit to be derived from a sermon is proportioned to the 
enlightening grace of the Holy Spirit present in the hearts of 
the preacher and his hearers. 

This is why the assistance of the Holy Ghost is invoked before the 
sermon. It is God, not the preacher, Who speaks to the heart. The 
preacher planteth only and watereth, it is God Who giveth the increase 
(1 Cor. iii. 7). However splendid the equipments of a ship, she 
cannot sail unless the wind is favorable; so it is with the preacher; 
however great his erudition and eloquence, unless the Holy Spirit 
imparts unction to his words, they avail nothing. An officer of dis- 



572 The Means of Ctrace, 

tinction, who had heard all the best preachers of France, once went 
to hear the sermon of a simple but pious village priest, the Cure 
d'Ars. When asked what he thought of the discourse, he answered: 
"Hitherto I have only been pleased with the orator, now I am dis- 
pleased with myself." It is said that St. Francis of Sales converted 
seventy thousand heretics by his preaching. When we see a beauti- 
fully executed piece of penmanship, we do not praise the pen, but the 
hand that guided it; in like manner it is not to the preacher who 
delivers an excellent discourse that praise is due, but to the Holy 
Ghost Who spoke by his lips. The word of God does not always bear 
fruit immediately, it is like the grain of mustard-seed (Matt, xiii.), 
which after a considerable time grew up and became a large tree. 
Sometimes it produces no fruit at all. Our Lord speaks of three cases 
in which the seed perished and only one in which it bore fruit; when 
it bears fruit the amount is not always the same. 



II. THE SACEAMEISTTS. 

On the Day of Pentecost the Holy Spirit manifested His coming 
by a visible and audible sign ; the tongues of fire indicated the enlight- 
enment of the apostles and the gifts of tongues; the mighty wind 
the power imparted to them. In like manner, it is the good pleasure 
of Our Lord to convey graces to us by means of sensible signs. He 
ordained for the communication of graces the use of such words 
and objects as clearly signify the grace bestowed; for the washing 
away of original sin He ordained that water should be poured on 
the head (because water cleanses) and at the same time a form of 
words used which indicates that it is done by the power of the Holy 
Trinity. In order to impart to us the gifts of the Holy Spirit, light 
and fortitude. He instituted the laying on of hands, with prayer 
and anointing with oil (oil being used to give light and warmth). 

1. The sacraments are sensible signs instituted by Christ, by 
means of which the graces of the Holy Spirit are communicated 
to us. 

In every sacrament there is: An appropriate ceremony, called 
the matter, and a form of words, which accompanies the sign or cere- 
mony ; and besides, there is the grace conveyed. The sign, or visible 
part of the sacrament, not only signifies what is effected in the sacra- 
ment, but effects what is signified. They are, therefore, practical 
signs ; they may also be termed instruments, and the graces conveyed 
through them the effect of those instruments. The signs of the 
sacraments are like Our Lord's humanity, and the graces conveyed like 
the Godhead concealed beneath this humanity. The word sacrament 
(sacramentum) means something holy and also mysterious, because 
in early times holy things were hidden from the knowledge of the 
heathen. 

Sensible signs were instituted by Our Lord for this purpose; 
that the graces conferred by their means might be made duly 
apparent, and thus recognized by man. 



The Sacraments, 573 

As water cleanses from impurity and extinguishes fire, the use 
of water signifies that our souls are cleansed and the fire of hell is 
quenched for us. As oil gives light and strengthens the body, its use 
in Confirmation indicates plainly that our souls are enlightened and 
fortified by the Holy Spirit, Thus the practical effect of the sacra- 
ment may be known by the sensible sign. Our Lord made use of 
distinct signs in conferring graces and benefits, although a thought, 
a word on His part, would have sufficed; He touched the eyes of 
the blind man (Matt. ix. 29) ; He touched the leper (Matt. viii. 3) ; 
He breathed on the apostles and said to them : " Keceive ye the Holy 
Ghost" (John xx. 22). Under the Old Dispensation likewise, God 
bestowed His favors through signs; witness Moses' rod, the brazen 
serpent, the gall of the fish wherewith Tobias' sight was restored, the 
cure of Xaaman by washing in the Jordan. Sensible signs were 
instituted by Our Lord for the purpose of humbling the pride of 
man. Man, who aspired to be as God, is now dependent for the re- 
covery of the grace he lost upon what is lowest in creation, lifeless 
matter. As for the sake of what is sensible man renounced heaven, 
it is meet that by use of what is sensible he should rise again to that 
which is suprasensible. Sensible signs are, in fact, required by the 
nature of man. If we were pure spirits we could dispense with 
corporal signs for the communication of spiritual gifts, but as we are 
composed of body and soul, we have need of them. 

In addition to the signs instituted by Christ, certain cere- 
monies have been appointed by the Church, in order to indicate 
still more perceptibly the graces conferred, and to increase the 
devotion of those who dispense and those who receive the sacra- 
ments. 

The various significant ceremonies are like a mirror, wherein a 
man sees the reflection of what goes on within his soul. The benefits 
God bestows on us are more deeply impressed upon our minds by 
the accompanying ceremonial; it also deepens the devotion of both 
the dispenser and the recipient of the sacrament. If an earthly mon- 
arch is seen by his subjects in all the grandeur of his regal dignity, 
attended by the grandees of his court, they think more of him than 
when he is in ordinary attire. The sacraments are not dispensed in 
a bare and informal manner, but are accompanied by the accessories 
of a rich and solemn ceremonial ; this is not only to make a greater im- 
pression upon mortals, but to give greater glory to God. The cere- 
monies also constitute a certain preparation for the reception of the 
sacraments; they prepare the soil of the heart, that the good seed 
may bear more abundant fruit. The ritual is not precisely the same 
in all dioceses, local custom having added some rites which cannot 
well be abolished, but the Roman ritus is the one universally followed. 
The ceremonies of the Church may be omitted in case of necessity, 
as in Baptism when there is danger of death. 

2. Christ instituted seven sacraments: Baptism, Confirmation, 
Holy Eucharist, Penance, Extreme TJnction, Holy Orders, and 
Matrimony. 

The doctrine of the seven sacraments is as old as the Church 



574 The Means of Grace. 

herself. All the sects that fell away from the Church in the early 
centuries retained the seven sacraments, as did the Greeks and 
Eomans at a later period. The institution of seven sacraments is, it 
is true, not mentioned in Holy Scripture, but it is not said that there 
were more or less. On this point Tradition is sufficient authority. The 
seven sacraments answer exactly to the needs of the soul, which re- 
semble to a certain extent the exigencies of the body. The life of 
the soul begins at Baptism, it is fortified by Confirmation, brought to 
perfection by the Holy Eucharist; if the life of the soul be lost, it 
is restored by Penance and Extreme Unction ; it is kept up by Holy 
Orders and Matrimony from generation to generation. 

Through the seven sacraments we receive divine grace at 
the very time of our life when we are most in need of it. 

These times occur at birth, at our entrance into youth, when we 
have lost the friendship of God, when we embrace a new state of 
life, and at the hour of death. As at sea there are islands and har- 
bors, where the mariner can cast anchor and take in supplies; as 
there are roadside inns where the traveller can pause to rest and 
recruit his strength, so on the weary journey of life the sacraments 
are provided to afford support and refreshment now and again to 
the pilgrim. 

3. By the three sacraments, Baptism, Confirmation, and Holy 
Orders, there is imprinted upon the soul a certain spiritual and 
indelible mark or character, on account of which they cannot be 
repeated (Council of Trent, 7, 9). 

The indelible mark or character consists in a special consecration 
and dedication to Christ. By this mark the angels know whether a 
man is one of God's family, and if so, they give him particular pro- 
tection. This mark is not effaced by mortal sin, it never can be re- 
moved from the soul. Consequently these three sacraments can never 
be received a second time, not even by one who has apostatized from 
the faith and has been received back into the Church. These three 
sacraments will be like a seal upon the soul in a future life; they 
will be a cause of eternal glory and rejoicing to the blessed; to the 
reprobate they will be a source of shame and confusion. 

4. Two of the sacraments, Baptism and Penance, are instituted 
principally with the object of conferring sanctifying grace where 
it was not already given; the five others with the object of in- 
creasing that gift. 

The holy sacraments are the wine and oil of the Samaritan in 
the Gospel, for the maintenance and restoration of the health of the 
soul. Baptism and Penance are called sacraments of the dead, of 
those who are spiritually dead, because they were instituted for those 
whose spiritual life is destroyed by mortal sin. The five others are 
sacraments of the living, because they were instituted for those who 
are in a state of grace. It is, however, possible for sanctifying grace 
to be increased by Baptism and Penance, if through earnest amend- 
ment of life and heartfelt contrition a man has merited to receive 
the Holy Ghost previous to Baptism or confession, like the centurion 



The Sacraments. 575 

Cornelius, on whom, and on whose household, the Holy Ghost was 
poured out while St. Peter was preaching (Acts x. 44)- So also one 
may go to confession without being guilty of mortal sin and thereby 
acquire more grace. 

Each sacrament has besides its own individual object, and 
confers a grace peculiar to itself. 

Thus Baptism confers the grace to live according to the pre- 
cepts of the Gospel ; Confirmation, to confess the faith fearlessly ; the 
Holy Eucharist, to make progress in the supernatural life; Penance 
preserves us from relapse into sin; Extreme Unction is a remedy; 
Holy Orders and Matrimony confer the graces appropriate to those 
states in life. Such is the great practical efficacy of the sacraments, 
and yet how little we appreciate their value ! What efforts, what 
sacrifices, people make to keep or to regain their bodily health! And 
yet they will not employ the simple, easy means within their reach 
for preserving the health of their soul, which is far more important. 

5. Due preparation must be made before receiving the sacra- 
ments, in order to obtain the graces they convey. 

Any one who approaches the Sacrament of Baptism or Pen- 
ance without a thorough change of heart, or who receives the 
other sacraments in a state of mortal sin, commits the terrible 
sin of sacrilege, and will not obtain the graces of the Holy Spirit 
until the hindrance to grace has been removed. 

On this account in the early ages of Christianity a two years* 
probation was required before admission to Baptism, the object of 
this being to give the heathens time to reform their life. St. Peter 
in his preaching insisted on the necessity of penance and sincere con- 
version (Acts ii. 38; iii. 19). To this day the Church requires those 
who approach holy communion to go to confession first. How repre- 
hensible is the conduct of those who, from force of habit, or because 
of some special indulgence, go to confession without purposing a 
serious amendment of life ! " The sacraments," St. Augustine says, 
" are the salvation of those who use them aright, the damnation of 
those who misuse them." That which is meat to the healthy is poison 
to the sick. Infant baptism is the only case in which no previous 
preparation is necessary. And if any one is so unhappy as to receive 
one of the sacraments sacrilegiously he may yet participate in the 
grace of the sacrament, if the obstacle to it be removed. The sacra- 
ments are like the sunshine; it cannot penetrate into a room of 
which the shutters are closed, but as soon as they are opened, it 
streams in, warming it and illumining it. In like manner a sacra- 
ment, if received unworthily, need not be received again ; on amend- 
ment of life, its gracious influences are freely exercised. This rule 
does not hold good in regard to the Holy Eucharist ; if it be received 
by one who is in mortal sin, the grace of it is lost, even if the sinner 
returns to a state of grace. The more worthy the recipient, the 
greater the graces conferred by the sacrament. The drier the wood, 
the more freely it bums. If the vessel taken to the spring be clean. 
Ihe water contained in it will be pure. 



576 The Means of Grace, 

There are two indispensable conditions which the Church 
imposes on those who approach the sacraments: They must be 
qualified to receive them, and desirous to receive them. 

The power of assimilating food is dependent upon certain organs 
of the human body; even so certain qualifications are necessary for 
the reception of the sacraments. An unbaptized person is incapable 
of receiving any of the other sacraments; a child who has not 
reached the age of reason cannot receive the Sacrament of Penance; 
Extreme Unction cannot be given to one who is in robust health; no 
one under the age of twenty-three can receive Holy Orders. If a 
sacrament is administered to any one against his will, it is invalid. 
The Church has never sanctioned the action of secular rulers who 
have compelled their subjects to be baptized, as was done in early 
times. Thus now at Baptism the question is asked : " Wilt thou be 
baptized ? " The last rites of the Church are, it is true, administered 
to persons who are unconscious, before death; but only if it be sup- 
posed that they would have wished for the sacraments had they been 
conscious. The baptism of infants is justified on these grounds. 

6. Supposing the priest who administers the sacrament to be 
unworthy, the graces of the Holy Spirit will still be communicated 
by means of the sacrament. 

The entire efficacy of the sacraments is derived from the merits 
of Christ, not those of the priest who dispenses them. It is out of the 
power of man to confer what is divine. The sacraments are essenti- 
ally holy in themselves, not because they are administered by one 
who is holy. Nor is the grace of the sacraments lessened by the evil 
life of the priest. God is wont to make use of unworthy instruments. 
The minister is but the dispenser of the mysteries of God (1 Cor. iv. 
1). A leper can act as porter as well as a healthy man, provided he 
has the key of the door. A judge may be, as a"toan, worse than the 
criminal before him, yet he can pass sentence on him. The coin of 
the realm has the same value in the hand of a bad as of a good man. 
The wine is the same, whether it be drunk out of an ordinary glass 
or a gold goblet. So it is with the sacraments; the Donatists, who 
asserted the contrary, were heretics. If the sacraments could only be 
administered aright by good priests, one would never have any cer- 
tainty in regard to them. 

The Church imposes two indispensable conditions on those 
who administer the sacraments: they must make use of the 
prescribed sensible sign without any essential alteration at the 
same time as the form of words, and they must have the in- 
tention to do what the Church does. 

If wine, for instance, were employed instead of water for baptiz- 
ing, the visible sign vould be essentially changed, and it would be 
no baptism at all. Or if one were to say: "I bnptize thee in tbe 
name of Christ," the audible sign would be essentially changed, aprJ 
it would be no baptism. But the wrong pronounciation of some word 
— by a foreigner perhaps — would not interfere with the efficacy ^^ 



The Sacraments, yn 

the sacrament. Ii the prescribed form of words is pronounced some 
time before or after the water is poured upon the head of the person 
to be baptized, the baptism is not valid; the two actions must be 
simultaneously performed. When Protestants baptize, their baptism 
is valid, if they have the intention to do what the (true) Church does, 
and are careful to adhere to what is prescribed. 



1. BAPTISM. 

Even heathen nations, such as the Egyptians, Greeks, and Komans, 
made use of water to cleanse their souls and render them pleasing 
to the Deity. The Jewish law enjoined purifications, to cleanse from 
various legal uncleannesses (Lev. xii.-xv.). Before the giving of the 
Ten Commandments the people were to be sanctified and wash their 
garments (Exod. xix. 10). John the Baptist baptized in the desert 
those who promised amendment of life, to signify the remission of 
sins which they would gain by their penitential works. The baptism 
of Christ is of a different nature; it has a transforming power, 
for it washes away sin and confers the gift of the Holy Ghost (Matt, 
iii. 11). 

1. This is what takes place at Baptism: Water is poured upon 
the head of the person to be baptized, and at the same time the 
words appointed by Our Lord are repeated; the person is thereby 
cleansed from original sin and all other sins, he is gifted with 
habitual and sanctifying grace, and becomes a child of God, an 
heir of heaven, and a member of the Church, 

At our baptism much the same takes place as at Our Lord's 
baptism : like Him, we have water poured upon our head, and certain 
words are spoken ("I baptize thee in the name of the Father, and of 
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost ") ; the Holy Ghost descends upon 
us (although not in the form of a dove), we are made temples of the 
Holy Ghost and endowed with sanctifying grace; God the Father 
says : " This is My beloved son, in whom I am well pleased " (we are 
made children of God), and the heavens are opened (we are made 
heirs of immortality). Again, much the same takes place at our 
baptism as at the cleansing of Naaman (4 Kings v. 14) ; we are 
washed with water, and delivered from the leprosy of sin, both orig- 
inal and actual. So again much the same takes place at our baptism 
as at the passage of the Israelites through the Jordan (1 Cor. x. 2) ; 
we pass through the water of Baptism into the promised land, the 
Church of which we become members. Those on whom sanctifying 
grace has been bestowed, are in virtue of that bestowal children of 
God and heirs of heaven. Only the baptized have the right to call 
God their Father, hence in early times the Lord's Prayer was not 
taught to the unbaptized. St. Louis of France used to say: " I think 
more of the private chapel where I was baptized, than of the Cathe- 
dral of Bheims where I was crowned; for the dignity of a child of 
God, which was bestowed on me at Baptism, is greater than that of 
the ruler of a kingdom. The latter I shall lose at death; the other 
will be my passport to everlasting glory." It is because man is 



578 The Means of Grac$, 

cleansed from sin by baptism that St. Paul exclaims : " There is 
therefore now no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus " 
(Kom. viii. 1). The words of St. Peter on the Day of Pentecost show 
what is the effect produced by Baptism : " Do penance, and be 
baptized, every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ, for the re- 
mission of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy 
Ghost " (Acts ii. 38). St .Paul speaks of Baptism as " the laver of 
regeneration and renovation of the Holy Ghost," whereby "being 
justified by His grace we may be heirs according to hope of life 
everlasting" (Titus iii. 5, 7). Again he says: "In one spirit were 
we all baptized into one body " (1 Cor. xii. 13). 

Baptism was instituted bj Our Lord at His own baptism and 
enjoined upon the Church at His ascension. 

Our Lord caused Himself to be baptized in the Jordan in order to 
sanctify water and impart to it a cleansing power. The manifesta- 
tion of all the three persons of the Holy Trinity at the time of His 
baptism showed that the sacrament was to be administered in the 
name of the three divine persons. Christ also told His apostles at 
His ascension to go, " baptizing all nations in the name of the Father, 
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost " (Matt, xxviii. 19) . 

2. Baptism acts spiritually as water does materially. 

It cleanses us from the stains of sin, it extinguishes for us 
the flames of hell and of purgatory; it imparts to us a new life, 
it quenches the thirst of the soul, it gives us strength to fulfil 
the commandments, causes us to bring forth fruit to life eternal, 
and makes us members of Christ's mystical body. 

Every one knows that in the natural order water cleanses the body, 
puts out fire, and recalls to consciousness one who has fainted; that 
it invigorates the human frame and gives fertility to the soil. The 
water of Baptism does the same in the spiritual order. Every new- 
born infant has the stain of original sin attaching to him, and every 
adult has, in addition, that of actual sin. These sins vanish at the 
laver of regeneration as a spark disappears if it falls into the ocean. 
On this account no penance is enjoined on the newly-baptized. Any 
one dying immediately after baptism, goes straight to heaven if he 
has at the time no attachment to venial sin, thus escaping purgatory 
and hell. And since the person baptized receives the Holy Ghost, 
and with Him sanctifying grace, a new life begins for him, the life 
in God. Thus Baptism is the birth of the soul, whereas the other 
sacraments are its food or its medicine. Baptism is also called 
regeneration, because it is the commencement of another and a new 
life. When the water is poured upon the exterior, an interior change 
takes place; the individual becomes a new creature — from sinful he 
becomes just. In Baptism true peace of mind is acquired through 
the indwelling of the Holy Ghost. The early Christians used to feel 
the same interior happiness after baptism that we feel after making 
a good confession. It may truly be said that the water of Baptism 
quenches the thirst of the soul. Furthermore, when the Holy Ghost 
enters into the soul at Baptism, He enlightens the understanding and 



The Sacraments. 579 

justifies the will. When Saul, the persecutor of the Christians, was 
baptized, there fell from his eyes as it were scales (Acts ix. 18), in- 
dicating that his spiritual blindness was at an end. Baptism also 
confers strength to resist the temptations of the evil enemy. Yet the 
corrupt proclivity remains, and man is ever subject to temptations, 
as the Hebrews, when they had escaped from servitude by the 
passage of the Red Sea, were still exposed to the attacks of their 
adversaries in the desert. As the will is fortified by Baptism, we are 
better able to perform good works. He who has received the Holy 
Ghost possesses divine charity (Council of Trent, 6, 7), and by charity 
we abide in God, and are closely united to Him (John xiv. 23 ; 1 John 
iv. 16). Hence, having received the Holy Ghost and with Him divine 
charity, we are in Baptism made one with Christ (Gal. iii. 27) ; we 
are united to Christ as members to the head ; " your members are the 
members of Christ" (1 Cor. vi. 15). We are made members of the 
one great body of which Christ is the head and the life; all the 
graces which we receive as members of the Church proceed from 
Christ. Hence He is rightly termed the lifegiving Head of the 
Church, for in one Spirit we were all baptized into one body (1 Cor. 
xii. 13, 15). In Baptism we are cut off from the stock of the old 
sinful Adam, and grafted into Christ as new creatures; we are no 
longer of the posterity of the old Adam, but of the posterity of Christ. 
Baptism is compared to the door of Noe's ark. See how marvellous 
are the effects of this sacrament ! The grace of Baptism is of all the 
gifts of God the most excellent, the most exalted, the most precious. 
Who, being unbaptized, would not desire Baptism ? 

3. Baptism is indispensably necessary to salvation. Hence 
children who die unbaptized cannot enter heaven (Council of 
Trent, 7, 5). 

Our Lord says: "Unless a man be born again of water and of 
the Holy Ghost, he cannot enter into the kingdom of heaven " (John 
iii. 5). He makes no exception, not even in the case of infants. St. 
Basil says Baptism is the vessel wherein we embark for the celestial 
port. Baptism is no less indispensable in the spiritual order than 
water in the natural order, and since it is so indispensable, God has 
made it very easy. ITothing is absolutely necessary but water, which 
may be had everywhere ; every one can baptize in case of need ; new- 
bom infants may be baptized; and for adults the simple desire is 
sufficient, if actual baptism is impossible. And since Baptism is of 
such urgent necessity for salvation, it follows that infants dying 
unbaptized cannot attain eternal felicity. For every child coming 
into the world has the taint of original sin, and has not sanctifying 
grace, without which no man can enter heaven. Yet, although in- 
fants dying without baptism are excluded from participation in celes- 
tial joys, the divine Judge does not consign them to the torments of 
hell, because they have never committed actual sin ; they enjoy a cer- 
tain natural happiness without physical suffering or mental sadness; 
they are cheerful as those are with whom all goes well on earth. 
But the happiness which is their portion bears much the same relation 
to everlasting felicity as the feeble light of a candle does to the bril- 
liance of the noonday sun. Thus parents who through negligence 
allow their children to die unbaptized have much to answer for. The 



580 The Means of Grace. 

eternal salvation of the infant is entirely dependent on the free will 
of its feUow-man, especially near relatives. St. Augustine mentions 
the relics of St. Stephen having been efficacious in restoring to life 
a dead child in order that it might leceive Baptism. 

4. Hence it follows that parents ought to have their children 
baptized immediately after their birth, because new-born infants 
hover between life and death. 

Infant baptism has been customary since apostolic times. St. 
Alphonsus says that if parents, without an urgent reason, neglect 
to have their children baptized within ten days after their birth, 
they incur the guilt of mortal sin. 

5. In case of necessity any one can administer baptism, and 
without the usual ceremonies. 

Nurses often baptize weakly infants. The baptism by Jews and 
heretics is valid, provided it is correctly administered, that is, if water 
be poured on the child's head (or some other portion of the body) and 
at the same moment the formula is repeated : " I baptize thee, etc." If 
the child lives, he should b© taken to the church later on for the 
usual ceremonies. If it be surmised that through overhaste, or 
some other cause, the first baptism was not properly performed, the 
priest must baptize the child again, conditionally. 

In the majority of cases only priests should administer Bap- 
tism, and that in the church with the prescribed ceremonial. 

In the early ages of Christianity only the bishop, or a priest whom 
he empowered to act for him, had the right to baptize. But when 
the dioceses became larger, and it was impossible for the bishop to 
go about continually to administer that sacrament, the power to 
baptize was made a part of the priests' office. As a matter of fact in 
the present day only the priest of the parish possesses this right, 
unless he authorizes another to act in his stead. Originally Bap- 
tism was only administered in baptistries, or small stone chapels 
containing all that was necessary for baptism, situated either in 
close proximity to the principal church of the diocese, or in the in- 
terior of the building. About the seventh century infant baptism be- 
came universal, and adult baptism of rare occurrence ; fonts contain- 
ing blessed water were then placed in the church where the bishop 
officiated. Baptism in private houses was strictly forbidden, but in 
the case of the children of kings and princes it might be administered 
in the palace-chapel. So sacred and solemn a ceremony ought to be 
performed in a consecrated place. In the present day the bishop's 
. permission must be obtained for the administration of Baptism in a 
private house. 

6. If baptism by water is impossible, it may be 'replaced by 
the baptism of desire, or by the baptism of blood, as in the case 
of those who suffer martyrdom for the faith of Christ. 

The Emperor Valentinian II. was on the way to Milan to be bap- 
tized when he was assassinated; St. Ambrose said of him that his 
desire had been the means of his cleansing. The patriarchs, prophets. 



The Sacraments, 581 

and holy men of the Old Testament had the baptism of desire ; their 
love of God was ardent, and they wished to do all that He commands. 
God accepts the will for the deed; in this He manifests His super- 
abundant loving kindness. But all the temporal penalties of sin are 
not remitted by the baptism of desire. Martyrdom for Christ's sake 
is the baptism of blood. This the holy innocents received, and the 
Church commemorates them as saints. All unbaptized persons who 
suffer martyrdom for the Christian faith, for some act of Christian 
virtue, or the fulfilment of a Christian duty, also received the baptism 
of blood. Witness St. John Baptist ; or St. Emerentiana, who, while 
yet a catechumen, was found by the pagans praying at St. Agnes' 
tomb, and was put to death by them. The Church does not pray for 
the unbaptized who suffer death for Christ; for He Himself says; 
" He that shall lose his life for Me, shall find it " (Matt. x. 39). 

7. In the early ages of the Church solemn Baptism was ad- 
ministered on three days of the year: Holy Saturday, the eve of 
Whitsunday, and in the East on the eve of the Epiphany. 

Baptism used to be administered in the night preceding Easter 
and WTiitsunday. It was administered at Easter, because it is a 
spiritual resurrection, and therefore appropriate to the season; at 
Pentecost, because on the first day of Pentecost three thousand per- 
sons were baptized, and because the Holy Spirit is given in Baptism ; 
on the eve of the Epiphany because the Church commemorates the 
baptism of Our Lord in the Jordan on that day. Individuals were 
also baptized at other times, the sick, for instance, or converts who 
were thoroughly versed in Christian doctrine. The water to be used 
in Baptism is solemnly blessed on Holy Saturday and on the eve of 
Pentecost to this day ; the ceremonial is elaborate and impressive ; it 
is accompanied by prayers and chants, and many beautiful symbolical 
ceremonies, such as the mixing of the chrism, breathing upon the 
water, dipping the paschal candle into it, etc. 

In the first ages of Christianity, religious instruction pre- 
ceded Baptism; the candidates for Baptism were called cate- 
chumens. 

Any one who desired to become a Christian had to present him- 
self to the bishop, who questioned him closely, and if he thought him 
worthy admitted him into the number of the catechumens. He laid 
his hands upon him, as a sign that he was soon to receive the Holy 
Ghost; he made the sign of the cross upon his forehead and breast, 
to signify that he must believe the teaching of our crucified Lord, 
and shape his life thereby; finally he put salt on his lips, to denote 
preservation from the temptation of sin. The candidate was then a 
catechumen of the first class; for two years he was instructed in 
biblical history, the Ten Commandments, the precepts of charity, and 
allowed to be present at Mass until the creed. At the end of the 
second year, he became a catechumen of the second class : that is, he 
was obliged to fast in Lent, to hear sermons, to confess his sins in 
public and undergo various exorcisms, anointings and other sym- 
bolical ceremonies. In the last week before Baptism was adminis- 
tered, after Palm Sunday, that is, the candidates were taught the 



582 The Means of Grace. 

doctrine of the mystery of the Holy Trinity, the Apostles' Creed and 
the Lord's Prayer. All these ceremonies previous to Baptism have 
been retained until the present day. 

Immediately before Baptism the candidate had to take a 
solemn vow to believe and follow the teachings of Christ. (The 
baptismal vow or covenant.) 

Standing v^ith his face towards the west, he renounced the devil 
and all his works (the worship of idols and the corrupt practices of 
the heathen), and the pomps and vanities of the world. Then turn- 
ing towards the east, he promised to believe and follow the teaching 
of Christ. This promise is known as the baptismal vow; it is also 
called a covenant, because God at the same time promises the assist- 
ance of His grace to fulfil the promise made, and to reward those 
who keep it with eternal felicity after death. The baptismal vow 
resembles the military oath taken by the soldier, for at baptism we 
are enrolled under the banner of Christ, and promise to fight against 
the adversaries of God. The baptismal vow also resembles the mar- 
riage treaty concluded between those who are wedded at the altar, 
for the soul then promises fidelity and love to her celestial Bride- 
groom. It is well for those who have been baptized in their infancy 
to renew their vows at certain times after they have attained the age 
of reason, particularly^ before approaching the sacraments. St. John 
Chrysostom used to renew his vows in the hours of temptation, say- 
ing: "I renounce the devil and give mj^self wholly to Christ." In 
the time of persecution the early Christians were accustomed to 
solemnly renew their vow once a year, to strengthen themselves in 
the faith. One could wish that this was done now. Christians who 
have been unfaithful to their vows will, at the Last Judgment, hear 
from the lips of Our Lord the appalling words : " Thou wicked servant, 
out of thine own mouth will I condemn thee, by the promise thou 
didst once solemnly make to Me." 

Formerly baptism was generally by immersion, but often- 
times water was sprinkled or ponred upon the individual. 

The priest and the godfather, or in the case of women, the god- 
mother, led the person to be baptized by the hand down the steps, and 
plunged him three times under the water, while the priest pronounced 
the words prescribed by Our Lord. The threefold immersion was in 
honor of the most Holy Trinity; it was also in commemoration of 
the burial of Christ and His rising again, and was intended to sig- 
nify that the old, sinful man was buried, and the new man had arisen 
(Rom. vi. 3, 11). In the later centuries baptism by immersion was 
abolished, and the custom of sprinkling almost exclusively adopted. 

The name of a saint was given to every one at the baptismal 
font; this was his baptismal or Christian name. 

The individual baptized was placed under the special protection of 
a saint or angel, who was to serve him as a model. Socrates of old 
used to advise parents to give the names of virtuous persons to their 
children in order to encourage them to imitate their example. Alex- 
ander the Great used to say to soldiers who had the same name as 



TJie Sacraments, 583 

himself: "Either take another name, or see that thou dost credit 
to my name." The addition of the name of some saint was to indi- 
cate that the person baptized had been made a child of God, and in- 
corporated into the company of the saints. On occasions when God 
bestowed particular favors on one of His servants, the name was some- 
times altered; as Abram became Abraham, Simon was called Peter, 
Saul was changed to Paul. The Church does not approve of heathen 
or fantastical names being given to children. Priests cannot give 
such names in Baptism, though they enter them in the register. 
The name of a saint may often prove an incentive to him who bears it, 
to lead a Christian life. 

When Baptism is administered with the usual ceremonies, 
which is called solemn Baptism, the person baptized must have 
a godfather or godmother, or one of each, but not more. 

The obligation of a sponsor is to see that the person baptized 
keeps the faith and leads a Christian life. In appointing sponsors, 
the Church acts like a man who lends money; he requires securities. 
A child when born into the world, requires a nurse to bring it up ; so 
one who is baptized needs some one to watch over his spiritual 
growth. The sponsors have also to provide for the Christian instruc- 
tion of their godchild, if the parents neglect their duty in this re- 
spect, or are removed by death. ISTow that children receive regular 
religious teaching at school, the responsibilities of the sponsor are 
virtually almost nothing; still he should endeavor to influence his god- 
child for good, if necessary. A spiritual affinity is contrcioted between 
the sponsors and the person baptized, not with his parents, whicli 
the Church regards as an impediment to marriage. Hence the num- 
ber of godparents is limited to two, to prevent difficulties arising. 
One sponsor is indispensably necessary^ If a man, he must be at 
least fourteen years old; if a woman, twelve is the lowest age ad- 
missible; the sponsor, if there be but one, must be of the same sex 
r- the person baptized, and a Catholic (non-Catholics can only be 
allowed as witnesses). The sponsor ought to have been confirmed, 
and be known to lead a good life; the parents of the child cannot 
possibly act as his sponsors, nor members of a religious Order, be- 
cause they cannot, if necessary, replace the parents. At baptism the 
sponsor, holding the infant on his right arm, awaits at the entrance 
of the baptistry the coming of the priest, who asks the name the child 
is to receive, and interrogates him by name thus : " "What dost thou 
ask of the Church of God ?" The answer is : " Faith and life everlast- 
ing, which it obtains for me." The priest then performs the same 
ceremonies as were prescribed for the reception of a catechumen; 
afterwards he lays his stole upon the child (as a sign of his eccles- 
iastical powers), and admits both him and his sponsor into the church, 
when the Apostles' Creed and the Lord's Prayer are recited. Next 
the person to be baptized, or if he be an infant, his sponsor, takes 
the baptismal vows; to the three first questions addressed to him he 
replies: "I renounce them," and to the three last, "I believe." The 
baptism then takes place, and presently the priest dismisses the party 
with a valedictory benediction : " Go in peace and the Lord be with 
you." 



584 The Means of Grace, 

The beautiful ceremonies following upon Baptism denote 
the dignity conferred upon the newly baptized, and the obliga- 
tions resting upon him. 

The priest anoints the person or child on the top of the head with 
chrism in the form of a cross, to remind him that he is now a 
Christian, an anointed one. This unction also recalls his royal dig- 
nity as a son of the King of heaven; it admonishes him to overcome 
the concupiscences of the flesh (Gen. iv. 7). Moreover oil, being a 
mild substance, reminds him to practice meekness, and exercise the 
works of mercy; it also signifies the illuminating and justifying 
grace of the Holy Spirit. In former times the newly-baptized used 
to put on a white robe which they wore in the church for a week, until 
Low Sunday, as a symbol of the robe of baptismal innocence, and 
of the wedding-garment of sanctifying grace, which they were to 
keep unspotted until death. On the present day a white cloth is laid 
upon the newly-baptized. A lighted candle is then given to the per- 
son baptized (or to the sponsor, if an infant). This is to denote the 
light of the Holy Spirit, which he has received, and recalls the words 
of Our Lord : " So let your light shine before men, that they may 
see your good works, and glorify your Father Who is in heaven" 
(Matt. V. 16). It also indicates that the portals of the city of eternal 
light are opened to him. All these ceremonies have a sanctifying 
influence, and consecrate him who receives them to be a fitting temple 
of the Holy Ghost. 

Formerly the person baptized was confirmed immediately 
afterwards, and admitted to holy communion. 

He was also fully instructed in the doctrine of holy Mass, the 
sacraments, and prayer, the so-called disciplina arcani. Previous to 
Baptism he would not have understood them, as he was without the 
enlightening presence of the Holy Ghost, ^ee how great the esteem 
in which religious instruction was held I 



^. CONFIRMATION. 

Confirmation is so-called from its effect, which is to confirm and 
strengthen in the faith those who receive it; it is also spoken of as 
the laying on of hands (Acts viii. 17), from the nature of the cere- 
monies. Our Lord had given the Holy Spirit to His apostles before 
His ascension, yet they were timid and fearful, and did not lose this 
timidity until the Day of Pentecost, when the plenitude of the Spirit 
was poured out upon them. So we receive the Holy Ghost at our 
baptism, but not in all His fulness ; this we receive at our Confirma- 
tion. On the Day of Pentecost the Holy Ghost came down upon the 
apostles under sensible signs, tongues as of fire and a mighty wind ; so 
in Confirmation the visible sign is the imposition of hands, the audi- 
ble sign the prayers repeated by the bishop. At Pentecost the apostles 
received the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit, pre-eminently the gift of 
fortitude, and the extraordinary gift of tongues; it is the same with 
us at Confirmation, only the gift of tongues is not now given. What 



The Sacraments. 685 

the Day of Pentecost was to the apostles, Confirmation is to the 
Christian. 

1. The ceremonial of Confirmation is as follows: The bishop 
lays his hands upon the candidates and anoints each one severally 
with chrism upon the forehead, with prayer; and those who are 
so anointed receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, especially courage 
to profess their faith. 

The bishop extends his hands over the persons to be confirmed, 
while he invokes the Holy Spirit with His sevenfold gifts, to indicate 
that a supernatural power is communicated to them; he then goes 
to each one separately, and laying upon his head four fingers of his 
right hand, with the thumb of the same hand he makes the sign of 
the cross with chrism on the forehead of the person to be confirmed, 
giving him thereby to understand that he must never be ashamed to 
profess himself the disciple of a crucified Saviour, saying meanwhile : 
" I sign thee with the sign of the cross and I confirm thee with the 
chrism of salvation. In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and 
of the Holy Ghost, Amen." Then he gives him a slight blow upon 
the cheek, to teach him that he must be ready to suffer persecution 
for the faith, saying : " Peace be with thee." In conclusion the bishop 
gives to all his blessing. The chrism is composed of olive oil and 
balm of Gilead ; it is solemnly blessed by the bishop in the cathedral 
church on Maundy Thursday. 

The apostles administered Confirmation, as at Samaria and 
Ephesus. 

The holy apostles Peter and John laid their hands on the Chris- 
tians at Samaria, and they received the Holy Ghost (Acts viii. 11-17). 
St. Paul did the same at Ephesus. At that time when Confirmation 
was administered, it was generally accompanied by extraordinary 
gifts of the Holy Ghost, such as the gift of tongues and of prophecy 
(Acts xix. 6). At the laying on of hands the Holy Ghost was wont 
to manifest His coming by visible signs, so that the apostles needed 
not to make use of chrism. Originally oil alone was employed; not 
until the sixth century was balm mingled with it. The oldest writers 
and Fathers of the Church speak of the Sacrament of Confirmation. 
Pope Urban, in the third century, says : " All the faithful ought, 
after baptism, to receive the Holy Ghost by imposition of hands, in 
order that they may become perfect Christians." St. Augustine re- 
marks that it must not be concluded, because the gift of tongues is 
no longer given, that the Holy Ghost is not communicated by imposi- 
tion of hands. It was only given in early times for the more rapid 
propagation of the Gospel. The Council of Trent expressly declares 
Confirmation to be a true sacrament, not a mere rite, which formerly 
was appended to Baptism, nor a public profession of faith in presence 
of the faithfiil. 

2. The supernatural effect of Confirmation is similar to the 
natural effect of oil. 

It creates within us a spirit of meekness; it increases, that 



586 The Means of Grace, 

is, our charity towards God and our neighbor, it enlightens 
our understanding, strengthens our will, preserves our soul 
from the corruption of sin, and fills us with the '^weet odor of 
virtue. 

Oil softens what is hard, it adds vigor to the frame, it diffuses 
an agreeable light. Balm is a preservative against putrefaction, and 
emits a fragrant smell. Confirmation increases our charity towards 
God and our neighbor, or, in other words, it increases sanctifying 
grace, and imparts to us the fulness of the divine Spirit. Hence 
Confirmation is the complement of Baptism ; in Baptism we are made 
the temples of the Holy Ghost, in Confirmation we receive Him in 
all His plenitude of graces. In Baptism we are made soldiers of 
Christ; at Confirmation our weapons are handed to us. Those who 
have been confirmed enjoy a greater degree of glory in heaven than 
the unconfirmed. This is why, in early times. Confirmation was ad- 
ministered to infants. The enlightenment of the mind consists in 
giving man a sense of the worthlessness of the goods and pleasures of 
this world, and inspiring him with an abhorrence of them. By Con- 
firmation our thoughts and aspirations are directed towards heaven; 
from earthly, man becomes heavenly, from sensual, spiritual; he be- 
comes a perfect Christian. By Confirmation timidity is dispelled 
and courage imparted. Before the Day of Pentecost the apostles were 
faint-hearted as children ; after that day they were bold as lions. The 
Holy Spirit produces a like change in those who are confirmed : they 
can say : " I can do all things in Him Who strengtheneth me " (Phil. 
iv. 13). St. Vincent is of opinion that at the end of the world Anti- 
christ will spare no effort to deter Christian people from receiving 
the Sacrament of Confirmation, as in that case they would more read- 
ily apostatize from the faith. And since Confirmation confirms the 
will, it makes it easier for those who have received it to resist tempta- 
tion, and thus avoid sin. If such a one should fall into mortal sin, 
he will incur a rigorous chastisement, like a soldier who deserts to 
the enemy's camp. And the stronger the will, the less difficult does 
the practice of virtue become. Confirmation tends especially to ren- 
der us humble and meek, as the oil and balm denote : for balm sinks 
into the liquid into which it is poured, symbolizing humility, and oil 
always floats on the surface, teaching man to rise superior to the 
vexations of life by unfailing meekness. Holy Scripture speaks of 
virtue as a good odor (2 Cor. ii. 15), because those who are virtuous 
are as pleasing to God as a sweet perfume is to us. 

3. Christians ought to be confirmed at the age when they pass 
from childhood to youth, because at that period temptations 
thicken around them, and they need strength of will to resist 
them. 

It is not well to administer the Sacrament of Confirmation before 
a child has attained the age of seven years, and the use of reason. 
The most suitable age is about twelve; it should not be deferred 
longer than the age of fourteen, but it is impossible to fix an exact 
time, as in large dioceses the bishop can only visit the more remote 
parishes at long intervals. 



The Sacraments^ 58? 

It is a grievous sin wilfully to omit to receive the Sacrament 
of Confirmation. 

To do this is to act like a traveller who, having to pass along a 
dangerous road, refuses to accept the means of defence offered to him; 
what wonder if he have to pay a high price for his folly! Although 
Confirmation is not absolutely necessary to salvation, yet God 
punishes contempt of this sacrament severely. The Fathers of the 
Church ascribe all the misery of Novatus, who became a teacher of 
heresy and ended his days in wretchedness, to his having neglected 
to be confirmed. In early times parents who did not have their chil- 
dren confirmed had to do penance for three years. Let it be enough 
for us to know that it is Christ's will that all should be filled with the 
Spirit (John vii. 37). 

4. The candidate for Confirmation ought previously to go to 
confession and, if possible, to holy communion; for to receive this 
sacrament one must be in a state of grace. 

For any one in mortal sin to receive Confirmation is as if a pre- 
cious and delicate substance were poured into an unclean vessel. It 
it not obligatory on one who is unquestionably in a state of grace to 
go to confession before Confirmation. In the early ages of the 
Church it was the custom to confirm very young children, as is now 
done in Greece and in Spain. In many dioceses children are con- 
firmed before they make their first communion, provided they are 
eight years old and have been to confession, in order that they may 
not lack the graces Confirmation imparts at the time when they most 
need them. St. Charles Borromeo established this rule throughout 
his diocese. 

The candidate for Confirmation must be well instructed in 
the doctrines of the faith, and prepare himself to receive the 
Holy Ghost by retirement and prayer. 

He should in this respect imitate the apostles, who spent the ten 
days before Pentecost in persevering prayer (Acts i. 14). On this ac- 
count several Synods decreed that candidates for Confirmation should 
be placed under instruction for a week previously; that each day in 
that week they should repeat seven Our Fathers and seven Hail 
Marys in honor of the Holy Ghost, and that they should keep the eve 
of their Confirmation day as a fast. Every one must be provided by 
his parish priest with a certificate, to certify that he is properly pre- 
pared for the reception of this sacrament. Without this the bishop 
will not confirm him. 

5. Confirmation is usually administered about Whitsuntide, as 
the bishop visits the whole of his diocese at intervals of a few 
years. 

In the first centuries of the Church Confirmation was, as a rule, 
administered at Easter and Pentecost, because it followed imme- 
diately upon Baptism. St. Jerome relates that in his time (about the 
commencement of the fifth century), the bishops used to take long 
journeys for the purpose gf confirming those who had been baptized 



588 The Means of Grace, 

by a priest or a deacon. An ordinary priest cannot administer Con- 
firmation unless he be expressly authorized and empowered to do 
so by the authority of the Pope ; they are thus empowered in mission- 
ary dioceses, which are of too great extent for the bishop to tra- 
verse, and where the converts would be in danger of relapsing into 
paganism unless they were confirmed in the faith as soon as possible. 
As in erecting a building the whole of the work is done by the work- 
men, the finishing touch alone being put by the architect, so in the 
spiritual fabric it devolves upon the bishop to administer Confirma- 
tion, whereby the top-stone is put to the edifice (St. Thomas Aquinas). 
This sacrament appears more imposing when administered by the 
bishop in person. 

The person confirmed receives the name of some saint at his 

Confirmation. 

When Confirmation followed inunediately upon Baptism, no other 
name was added to that given in baptism. But when in after years, 
the convert got into the habit of retaining his heathen name after 
Baptism, he was made to take the name of some saint at his Con- 
firmation, on whom he was to look as his model in the spiritual war- 
fare, as a soldier looks to his general. And he whom he chose for 
his pattern on earth he was to invoke as his intercessor in heaven. 
Besides this heavenly guide, the Christian has at Confirmation an 
earthly guide. 

The person to be confirmed must also have a godfather or 
godmother. 

The gladiator who is about to enter the arena requires some one 
to instruct him in swordsmanship and assist him with his counsel; 
so it is at Confirmation. In all the difficulties of life the godparent 
ought to be ready to support and help his godchild; he ought to do 
his utmost to induce him to keep within the paths of virtue ; and the 
godchild ought to feel that he must not rely too much on his own 
powers, but must seek counsel from others. A spiritual relationship 
'exists between the two, which is no longer an ecclesiastical hindrance 
to marriage. The sponsor chosen ought to be one who has himself 
been confirmed, a person of blameless life, older than the one to be 
confirmed, and of the same sex; not, if it can be avoided, the same 
who stood sponsor for him at the baptismal font. 

Those who present themselves to the bishop to be confirmed 
must be simply and suitably dressed. 

The Holy Spirit does not take up His abode in the heart that is 
enslaved by the pride of life. God resisteth the proud (1 Pet. v. 5). 
Some, on going to be confirmed, think more of their dress than of the 
sacrament they are about to receive. It is no longer required of the 
candidates for Confirmation that they should be fasting, in fact, this 
would not be possible now, as the ceremony often lasts a long time. 
They should be dressed simply, their forehead being uncovered ; each 
one should have a prayer-book, and the necessary certificate. Adults 
kneel, children either stand or kneel, to receive the sacrament; be- 
hind each one stands the sponsor, his right hand on the right shoul- 



The Sacraments, 589 

der of his godchild. All must be present in the church before the 
bishop extends his hands over all in general, after that the door is 
closed and no one else admitted. Nor must any one depart before the 
bishop gives the final blessing, although it does not constitute an 
integral part of the sacrament. After receiving Confirmation, one 
must be careful not to drive away the Holy Spirit by feasting and 
diversions. " Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God " (Eph. iv. 30). The 
chief reason why the faith of Christians is so cold in the present day 
is because so little is now thought of the Sacrament of Confirmation. 



S. TEE HOLY EUCHARIST 

Institution and Nature of the Holy EucharisL 

Our Lord promised the Jews at Capharnaiim that He would 
give them His flesh to eat and His blood to drink (John vi.). 

After the miraculous multiplication of the loaves and fishes the 
people went in search of Christ, and found Him in the synagogue at 
Capharnaum. They wanted Him to give them bread again; but He 
promised to give them the bread of immortality. When they asked 
Him for it. He answered : " The bread that I will give is My flesh." 
And when they refused to believe His words, He added : " Except you 
eat the flesh of the Son of man, and drink His blood, you shall not 
have life in you. He that eateth My flesh and drinketh My blood, 
hath everlasting life, and I will raise him up at the Last Day. For 
My flesh is meat indeed, and My blood is drink indeed" (John vi. 
52-56). 

Our Lord fulfilled this promise at the Last Supper; He 
changed the bread into His body, and the wine into His blood 
and gave it to the apostles (Matt. xxvi. 28). 

The apostles did not, however, see the body of Christ under the 
appearance of flesh, for the accidents of the bread remained, i.e., its 
color, taste, smell, weight. !N'or did they see His blood otherwise than 
as wine, because the accidents of the wine were retained; the sub- 
stance only was changed. So the shell of an egg remains the same 
while what is contained within it is changed into a living bird. 

1. The body of Christ under the appearance of bread, and the 
blood of Christ under the appearance of wine, is called the Most 
Holy Sacrament of the Altar. 

Here again we find the three essentials of a sacrament. The visi- 
ble sign is the form of bread and of wine, the audible sign is the 
words of Christ; the invisible grace is the reception of the body and 
blood of Christ; the institution of this sacrament took place at the 
Last Supper. The visible form portrays the invisible grace: the 
bread prepared with water and the flour of wheat, and baked with 
fire, represents the body of Christ which was subjected to cruel suf- 
fering; the wine, the juice pressed from the grape, represents the 
blood of Christ, which flowed from the wounds of His sacred body. 



590 The Mea7is of Grace. 

The bread is unleavened, to denote the purity of Christ's body; it 
is round in shape, because it conceals Him Who is without beginning 
and without end (Heb. vii. 3). Water is mixed with the wine, to 
signify the intimate union of the Godhead and manhood in His per- 
son. Bread and wine being the principal means of nourishment for 
the body, signify that the body and blood of Christ are the chief 
sustenance of the soul. This Sacrament is called the Most Holy Sac- 
rament of the Altar, because the change of substance takes place 
upon the altar; it is called the Blessed Sacrament, because in it not 
only are the graces of the Sacrament received, but the Author and 
Giver of all grace; and it is besides the most exalted and sublime 
of all the sacraments. It is called the Bread of heaven, the Bread 
of angels, because Our Lord comes down from heaven to be our food, 
a food which makes men like to angels. 

We speak of this Sacrament as the Sacrament of the Altar ^ 
because the priest, standing at the altar, does the same by 
Christ's command which He Himself did at the Last Supper. 

Our Lord commanded the apostles: "Do this for a commemora- 
tion of Me" (Luke xxii. 19). On this account the priest pronounces 
exactly the same words over the bread and wine which Our Lord 
uttered at the Last Supper, thereby changing the bread into the body, 
and the wine into the blood of Christ. 

The Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar is reserved in the 
tabernacle in every parish church. 

The tabernacle, which stands in the middle of the high altar, is 
made of wood, marble or brass, gilt inside, and lined with white silk 
curtains. In earlier times it was situated beside, not above the altar. 
The name of tabernacle, or tent, is given to it, from the sacred tent 
of the Israelites ; and the mysterious cloud that accompanied them on 
their journey, was a type of the tabernacle of God in which He dwells 
with men (Apoc. xxi. 3). A lamp is kept burning continually in the 
sanctuary before the tabernacle, to indicate the place where the 
Blessed Sacrament is reserved, and also to symbolize the Light of the 
world. It is, besides, emblematic of the perpetual adoration the angels 
pay to the God present upon the altar. In the Temple at Jerusalem 
there was a candlestick with seven branches in which lights burned 
continually. Our divine Lord is thus ever present with mortal men ; 
as He Himself declares : " I am with you all days, even to the con- 
summation of the world" (Matt, xxviii. 20). He is as truly present 
with us as with the saints in heaven ; the only difference is that they 
behold Him face to face, whereas He is hidden from our sight be- 
neath the eucharistic veils. The manna preserved in the ark was a 
type of the hidden God present in our tabernacles (Exod. xvi. 33). 

2. The presence of the body and blood of Christ under the ap- 
pearance of bread and wine is a mystery, because our feeble 
reason cannot comprehend it. 

Our Lord conceals Himself under the appearance of bread and 
wine iu order to test our faith, whether we believe His words rather 
than the testimony of our senses. If we saw what we believe, faith 



The Sacraments 591 

Would have no merit. Moreover, if we were to behold Our Lord in 
all the majesty of His glorified body, radiant with light, we should 
be struck with alarm, and dazzled, as those are dazzled who look with 
the naked eye on the noonday sun. Even the apostles could not bear 
the unveiled brilliance of the glorified body at Our Lord's transfigura- 
tion, for they fell to the ground upon their faces. And Moses cov- 
ered his face, when God appeared to him in the burning bush. We 
cannot trust our senses even in natural things, for they often deceive 
us. For instance, an oar half in the water looks as if it were broken ; 
objects seen from a distance appear quite small. Faith teaches us to 
believe that as the food we eat is assimilated to our body, as the moist- 
ure of the earth is changed into the sap of the vine and the juice of 
the grape, even so, and far more, by the power of His word, can Christ 
change bread into the substance of His body, and wine into His blood. 
He, Who by His almighty power can create things out of nothing, 
can surely effect a change in what already exists. He Who can cause 
the earth to bring forth bread, can change that bread into His own 
body. Many different heretics have contested the truth of this doc- 
trine of the real presence of Christ in the Sacrament of the Altar, 
and endeavored to attach a different meaning to Our Lord's words: 
" This is My body." But in the course of centuries almighty God 
has worked many striking miracles in confirmation of the truth. 
Consecrated Hosts have remained unconsumed in the midst of fire; 
they have remained suspended in the air without support ; the place 
where they were concealed has been disclosed by a bright light hover- 
ing around it; blood has flowed from the sacred Host during Mass; 
Our Lord has appeared in it in the form of an infant, etc. 

It has been the firm belief of Christians in all ages that the 
bread and wine are converted into the body and blood of Christ. 

St. Augustine says : " Our Lord held Himself in His own hands, 
when He gave His body to the disciples." St. Cyril: "H Christ 
changed water into wine on one occasion, He can also change wine 
into His blood." And when He asserts that it is His body, who shall 
dare to gainsay it? It was a calumny commonly brought against 
Christians by the heathen that they killed and ate the flesh of a child 
at their ceremonies. 

3. It is most true that under the species of bread, as also under 
the species of wine, Christ is present, God and man, whole and 
entire. 

Where the body and blood of Christ are, there He must be present, 
not in part, but in His whole person ; for now He hath risen from the 
dead to die no more, and consequently the body can no more be 
separated from the blood than the body and blood can be separated 
from the soul of Christ. Our Lord's words : " This is My body which 
is given for you," and: "This is My blood, which shall be shed for 
many," demonstrate that it is His living body. His living blood, that 
are present under the appearance of bread and wine, and therefore 
the living, not the dead Christ Who is present upon the altar. As a 
whole landscape may be seen in the pupil of the eye, so Christ is con- 
tained whole and entire in the sacred Host. 



592 The Means of Grace, 

4. Our Lord is present in every particle, however minute, of 
the consecrated bread and wine. 

We have seen that Christ is present in every Host, and when the 
priest breaks the Host, He is equally present in every fragment of it. 
If a magnet be broken in pieces, each part forms a separate magnet 
with the property of pointing to the north. And if a mirror is 
broken, in each portion one's face is reflected. But the body of Christ 
is not multiplied; His body is but one, animated and pervaded by 
His divinity, which fills all space. It is not increased by each fresh 
consecration, nor diminished by the numbers who receive it. As the 
light of a candle is not lessened, however many other candles are 
lighted at its flame, so Our Lord's body suffers no diminution when it 
is given to thousands of communicants. Thus St. Andrew said to 
the proconsul at Achaia : " I daily offer upon the altar to the al- 
mighty and true God the immaculate Lamb of God. And when all 
the faithful have received His sacred body, the Victim that was slain 
is yet alive and unconsumed." 

5. Christ is present in the consecrated elements as long as the 
accidents of bread and wine remain. 

Our Lord is not only present in the Sacrament of the Altar at 
the moment of communion, but both before and after the Host is 
consumed. Had this been otherwise. He would not have said : " Take 
and eat this, for this is My body." And He is present in those who 
receive the sacred Host as long as the accidents of bread remain 
unconsumed. Thus after communion we bear in our body the body 
of Christ. 

6. The duties of the Christian in regard to the Holy Sacrament 
of the Altar are these: He ought to visit it frequently, to adore 
it, and to receive it. 

We ought to visit the Blessed Sacrament frequently. In this re- 
spect the shepherds and the three kings, who came to worship the 
Infant Saviour in the manger, set us an excellent example. The 
saints spent many hours in prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. 
Cardinal Bellarmine, when a student, was accustomed whenever he 
passed by a church to go in and say an Our Father. When asked 
why ho did this, he replied: "It would be ill manners to go by a 
friend's house without a word of greeting." He was distinguished 
while yet a youth for his great wisdom. Access to Our Lord is not 
denied us ; the church door stands open, and from the tabernacle the 
voice of Our Lord calls to us : " Come unto Me, all you that labor and 
are burdened, and I will refresh you" (Matt. xi. 28). St. Teresa 
declares that Our Lord in the Adorable Sacrament of the Altar 
affords us far more satisfaction than can be derived from the whole 
world, with its festivities and pleasures. In His presence the sor- 
rowful are comforted, the foolish learn wisdom, the feeble are 
strengthened, and the poor are enriched. Wheresoever the body shall 
be, there shall the eagles also be gathered together; and in like man- 
ner the faithful should hasten to the Blessed Sacrament, the food of 
the soul. The saints loved to drink of this river of paradise, as the 
hart pants to quench his thirst at the fountains of water. Unwise in- 



The Sacraments. 593 

deed are they who in the hour of need, choose rather to seek human 
aid, to pour their troubles into a human ear ; they do not betake them- 
selves to the church, to Christ, Who is so willing, so able to help them. 

The Church admonishes us to pay homage to the Holy Sacra- 
ment of the Altar by the sanctuary lamp; by the bell rung at 
Mass and when the Viaticum is carried to the sick, by the proces- 
sions of Corpus Christi, and by frequent Expositions of the 
Blessed Sacrament. 

It is customary on entering or leaving a church to genuflect be- 
fore the Blessed Sacrament ; to kneel down reverently at the consecra- 
tion, and when benediction is given with the Blessed Sacrament. In 
former times people used to kneel whenever they met a priest carry- 
ing the sacred Host to the sick; it is related of Rudolph of Haps- 
burg that once when he was out hunting, he met a priest going to 
give communion to a dying man; immediately he dismounted, and 
kneeling by the roadside, gave his horse to the priest; nor would he 
allow the animal to be again used except in the service of the Church. 
Before receiving holy communion, we ought to make an act of adora- 
tion of the Blessed Sacrament. Unhappily many among us possess 
no living faith ; they pass by the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar 
with cold indifference. The procession of Corpus Christi was insti- 
tuted by Pope Urban IV. in 1264, with a view to increase our faith in 
the presence of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament, and the Exposition 
of the Forty Hours has the same object. The Confraternity of the 
Perpetual Adoration is intended to keep up the worship of the Blessed 
Sacrament uninterruptedly; each member has to spend at least one 
hour every month in adoration before the altar. This Sacrament 
was instituted by Our Lord immediately before His death in order to 
give it greater importance in our eyes, as we treasure more the last 
gift of a dying friend. If the Jews were not permitted to behold, 
much less to touch, the Ark of the Covenant, which was a type of 
the Adorable Sacrament of the Altar, what dread ought we not to 
feel in presence of the reality ! 

Christ invites us to receive the Most Holy Sacrament of the 
Altar when He says : " Except you eat the flesh of the Son of 
Man and drink His blood, you shall not have life in you " (John 
vi. 54). 

The reception of this Sacrament is known as communion, that is, 
union with Christ. In communion we receive Our Lord, as Zacheus 
did, into our house. In the Scriptures there are many tj^QS of the 
Holy Eucharist ; for instance, the tree of life in the midst of paradise, 
which gave immortality to our first parents ; the manna ; the paschal 
lamb ; the bread that gave Elias strength to go the forty days' journey 
to Mount Horeb; the miraculous multiplication of the loaves; the 
water made wine at the marriage of Cana. And holy communion is 
itself an earnest of the spiritual food wherewith we shall be nour- 
ished in heaven. 

The faithful receive the Holy Eucharist under the form of 



594 Hie Means of Grace, 

bread only; the priest alone, at Mass, receives it under both 
kinds. 

The priest at the altar offers an oblation, the very same as the one 
Christ offered on Calvary. On the cross Christ shed almost all His 
blood, so that His body and blood were separated one from the other. 
The two several species of bread and wine in the Mass signify this 
separation of Onr Lord's body and blood. The faithful, on the other 
hand, do not sacrifice the Victim, but receive the Sacrament ; it is un- 
necessary for them to receive the chalice, as Our Lord is contained 
wholly under either species. He Himself says: "He that eateth 
this bread shall live forever " (John vi. 59). There are many reasons 
for withholding the chalice from the laity; the precious blood might 
easily be spilled in passing from one to another ; there is the difficulty 
of procuring wine in some places; the difficulty of reserving it and 
bearing it to the sick ; and some people cannot bear the taste of wine« 
Communion in both kinds was, it is true, enjoined on the laity by 
the Holy See in the fifth century, but this was only done to combat 
the error of the Manichees, who declared wine to be an invention of 
the devil and wholly to be avoided. And in 1433 the chalice was for a 
time given to the laity, to induce the followers of Huss to return to 
the unity of the Church. 

The Necessity of Holy Communion, 

1. The Holy Sacrament of the Altar is the nourishment of our 
souls. 

Consequently the reception of this Sacrament is an indis- 
pensable means whereby to attain spiritual perfection or sanctity 
here, and eternal life hereafter. 

The Holy Eucharist is the nourishment of our souls; on it our 
spiritual life is dependent. Our Lord says: "He that eateth Me, 
the same also shall live by Me;" and again: "Except you eat the 
flesh of the Son of man and drink His blood, you shall not have life 
in you" (John vi. 58, 54). Holy communion is therefore essential 
to our progress in sanctity, and to the final attainment of eternal 
life. As the bodily health cannot be maintained without nourishing 
food, so spiritual health cannot be acquired and preserved without 
holy communion. St. Francis of Sales tells us that there are two 
classes of men who need holy communion : the perfect, that they may 
not decline in perfection, and the imperfect, that they may become 
perfect; the strong, that they may maintain their strength, and the 
weak, that they may acquire strength. The early Christians com- 
municated daily, and this it was that gave them constancy, and forti- 
tude to suffer martyrdom. As a rule the saints communicated fre- 
quently. Yet it must not be supposed that frequent communion is in 
any way a mark of sanctity, or the reward of sanctity; it is only a 
means of acquiring it. 

Therefore those who rarely receive holy communion will 
not make rapid progress in perfection. 



The Sacraments. 595 

The consciousness that even after confession we are unworthy to 
receive Our Lord, ought not to deter us from going to communion. 
The Church puts the words of the heathen centurion upon the lips of 
the intending communicant. No mortal can ever be worthy to receive 
a God. Yet it must be remembered that Christ did not institute the 
Holy Sacrament of the Altar for angels, but for men. Those who are 
conscious of their own misery, and desire to remedy it, will feel the 
need of frequent communion. Our daily failings ought not to hold 
us back; on the contrary, they ought to incite us to approach the 
holy table, that we may be delivered from them. For holy com- 
munion purifies the soul from venial sin, and weakens the force of 
evil concupiscence. Nor ought the absence of sweetness and con- 
solation deter us from communicating; "how unwise would be the 
man," says St. Ignatius, " who refused to eat his bread, and chose to 
die of hunger, because it was not spread with honey." Again, who 
would wait until he was warm before going to the fire ? " He who 
censures the practice of frequent communion," says Segur, " does 
the devil's work." The saints have always advocated frequent com- 
munion, aiid it has been urged on the faithful repeatedly by the 
Holy See. 

Those who wilfully neglect holy communion for a length- 
ened period, incur the risk of spiritual death here and eternal 
damnation hereafter. 

The soul cannot live without food any more than the body. Yet 
as certain saints have existed without taking any corporal sustenance, 
so others have lived for years without holy communion. St. Mary 
of Egypt, for instance, who spent forty years in the desert; and sev- 
eral anchorites, such as St. Paul and St. Anthony. The Holy Spirit, 
who led them into the wilderness, replaced all that holy communion 
could have been to them. Yet most, if not all, were communicated 
before their death. Every one, however, if he be prevented from re- 
ceiving communion, is bound to make a spiritual communion; that 
is, he must desire to communicate, and must do so actually, whenever 
opportunity offers. 

2. We are bound under pain of mortal sin to communicate at 
least once a year, and that at Easter; also in case of dangerous 
illness. It is, moreover, the wish of the Church that the faithful 
should, if possible, receive holy communion on Sundays and holy- 
days. 

In the first ages of Christianity the Christians conununicated 
daily. About the middle of the third century it became necessary to 
enjoin upon the faithful to communicate three times a year, at the 
three great festivals. In the Middle Ages people grew careless, some 
absented themselves from the holy table for years; consequently in 
the Lateran Council (1215) the Church decreed that every Catholic 
who had come to the age of reason, should receive holy communion 
at least once in the year, and that at Easter ; those who failed to obey 
this precept were to be deprived of Christian burial. Children are to 
be admitted to holy communion as soon as they can distinguish the 
heavenly food from the earthly, and it can confidently be assumed that 



596 The Means of Grace. 

they will receive this Holy Sacrament with due reverence and devo- 
tion. "Wherefore to put oif communion any longer or to exact a riper 
age for the reception of the same is to be rejected absolutely and the 
same has been repeatedly condemned by the Holy See." (Decree of 
S. Cong, of Sac. Disc.) In the Middle Ages children were allowed to 
make their first communion when they were seven years old. The 
Christian is also bound to receive holy communion if he be in danger 
of death. Hence the communion given to the sick is called the Viati- 
cum, the sustenance of the traveller on his last journey. The sacred 
Host must not be administered to any one who cannot swallow, or who 
is subject to vomiting. If the illness is of prolonged duration, the 
sick man may receive communion two or three times during its course, 
if he desire to do so. Holy communion must also be given to children 
who are in danger of death, provided they have attained the use of 
reason. "It is an utterly detestable abuse not to administer Viaticum 
and Extreme Unction to children having attained the use of reason." 
(Ibidem.) The priest must briefly instruct them in the chief truths of 
the Faith, and the sacraments they are about to receive. Furthermore, 
it is the desire of the Church that the faithful should, in as far as is 
possible, communicate on all Sundays and holydays. The Council of 
Trent would fain indeed that at each Mass the faithful who are pres- 
ent should communicate, not only in spiritual desire, but also by sacra- 
mental participation of the Eucharist, that thereby a more abundant 
fruit might be derived to them from this holy sacrifice (Council of 
Trent, 22, 6). Now it is of obligation that every Catholic should 
hear Mass on all Sundays and holydays, hence it may be inferred that 
they should receive holy communion on all those days at the least. 
Many Fathers and Doctors of the Church urge frequent communion 
on the faithful. "We give our bodies nourishment several times a 
day," says St. Charles Borromeo, "and shall our souls receive nourish- 
ment only once a year?" It is the duty of those who have the cure 
of souls to exhort the faithful to the practice of frequent, nay daily, 
communion, as the soul, like the body, will languish without nourish- 
ment. 

The confessor's advice should be asked in order that daily com- 
munion may be practised with more prudence and with greater 
fruit, but the confessor should not prohibit daily communion to 
any one who is in the state of grace and who approaches with an 
upright intention. 

The old controversy about frequent communion was finally settled 
by the Decree of Pius X, December 20, 1905. The mind of the Church 
on the question is therein clearly expressed. The decree says in 
effect: Let frequent and daily communion, a practice which is very 
much desired by Christ our Lord and by the Catholic Church, be open 
to all the faithful of whatever rank and condition they be, so that it 
may not be refused to any one who is in the state of grace, and who 
approaches the Holy Table with a good and upright intention. This 
good intention consists in a desire to fulfil the divine will and to be 
more closely united with God, and by that divine remedy to fight 
against one's weaknesses and defects, and not to approach out of 
routine, or vanity, or worldly motives. Venial sin is not an obstacle 
to daily communion, although it is in the highest degree becoming 
that daily communicants should be free from all fully deliberate venial 
sin. The sacraments, it is true, produce their effect ex opere operato, 
and yet because they produce greater effect in those who are better dis- 



The Sacraments. 697 

posed, care must be taken to make proper preparation for holy com- 
munion and due thanksgiving afterward. (Slater, "Moral Theology.") 

The priest must not administer holy communion to persons who 
are not able to distinguish this supersubstantial bread from ordinary 
food, or of whom it may be surmised that they will receive it with- 
out reverence and devotion. 

Thus children who have not attained the use of reason are not 
admitted to holy communion. If exceptions to this rule have been 
made in former days, it was because of the exigencies of the times. 
Children should be properly prepared before making their first com- 
munion. Idiots and lunatics are incapable of communicating; the 
latter may, however, have lucid intervals, or recover their reason at the 
approach of death. Both for first confession and communion a com- 
plete and perfect knowledge of Christian Doctrine is not necessary. 
The child will, however, be obliged to gradually learn the whole cate- 
chism according to its ability. The knowledge of Christian Doctrine 
required in order to be properly prepared for first holy communion is 
that they understand according to their capacity those mysteries of the 
Faith which are necessary as means of salvation, that they be able to 
distinguish the Eucharist from common and material bread and also 
approach the Sacred Table with the devotion becoming their age. 
(Decree of Sept. 8, 1910.) 

The Effects of Holy Communion. 

Holy communion is of great benefit both for the soul and the 
body. " The divine King," says St. Alphonsus, " is accustomed to 
reward royally all those who entertain Him well." 

Holy communion acts spiritually, as bread and wine act ma- 
terially. 

Bread and wine, i.e., material food, (1), Assimilates itself to the 
body; (2), Maintains life, promotes growth; (3), Dispels fatigue and 
weakness and imparts strength to the body; (4), Affords a certain 
satisfaction by pleasing the palate; (5), And influences the mind by 
the medium of the body. In a similar way the action of holy com- 
munion upon the soul may be described. 

1. By holy communion we are united most closely to Christ. 
Our Lord says : " He that eateth My flesh and drinketh My blood, 
abideth in Me, and I in him '' (John vi. 57) . 

Holy communion is, as it were, a continuation of the Incarnation. 
By His Incarnation Our Lord united Himself to mankind in general, 
by holy communion He unites Himself to each individual member of 
the human race. As two pieces of wax when melted are amalgamated 
with each other, so completely does Our Lord make Himself one with 
us in holy communion. He is in us and we are in Him. St. Augus- 
tine says that those who receive Our Lord frequently assume His 
nature, are, as it were, transformed into Him. By communion Christ 
changes our nature into His own, as leaven changes a quantity of 
flour. There is this difference between the spiiitual food we receive 
in communion and the ordinary food of the body; the latter is less 
powerful than our nature, and is assimilated by it ; the former is more 
r>ov/erful than our nature, and consequently it converts that nature 



598 The Means of Grace. 

into its own. Our nature is ennobled by communion, as a wild tree 
is ennobled by being grafted with a cultivated tree. Holy commimion 
also unites us to one another; all Catholics by means of it are made 
one body, as St. Paul says : " For we, being many, are one bread, one 
body, all that partake of one bread" (1 Cor. x. 17). The Fathers 
speak of communion as the general union of all the faithful in 
Christ and with one another {communis y unio). Hence it is called 
" the sign of unity, the bond of charity, the symbol of concord " 
(Council of Trent, 13, 8). 

2. Holy communion imparts actual graces, and also maintains 
and increases sanctifying grace in the soul. 

At each com in union fresh actual graces are obtained, that en- 
lighten the understanding and strengthen the will. Holy communion 
acts like the rising sun, dispelling darkness and bringing light. It 
imparts strength as did the bread of which Elias partook (3 Kings 
xix.) ; and power to withstand temptation and to practice virtue. 
Holy communion gives to the timid the courage of lions; St. John 
Chrysostom says that the devils tremble when they see lips reddened 
with the blood of the Lord. Those who have great trials and suffer- 
ings to endure ought to communicate often to acquire strength. It 
was because the early Christians were so cruelly persecuted that they 
used to fortify themselves so often by receiving holy communion; 
thence they gained courage to confront martyrdom. Whenever they 
knew that some danger had to be encountered, they approached the 
Holy Sacrament of the Altar, for they were conscious that otherwise 
their force would fail them. Those also who are exposed to violent 
temptations ought to communicate often, for holy conununion has 
even more power than had the blood of the paschal lamb sprinkled 
on the doorposts, to deliver from the destroyer. Holy communion 
preserves the life of the soul, as bread and wine do that of the body; 
for it maintains within us sanctifying grace, which gives vitality to 
the soul. Hence Our Lord says : " He that eateth Me, the same also 
shall live by Me;" and again : " If any man eat of this bread, he shall 
not die" (John vi. 50, 58), that is to say, he will not fall into mortal 
sin, and thus destroy the life of the soul. Holy communion is also 
the means of keeping us from relapse into mortal sin ; it is an antidote 
against the poison of sin (Council of Trent, 13, 2). Those who com- 
municate frequently persevere in grace ; for where God is often pres- 
ent, the enemy of God can find no permanent abode. Holy com- 
munion also increases sanctifying grace in the soul; and since the 
degree of felicity we shall enjoy hereafter is dependent on the measure 
of sanctifying grace we possess here, it follows that holy communion 
conduces to the augmentation of our eternal happiness. 

3. The force of evil concupiscence is lessened by holy com- 
munion, and we are freed from venial sin by means of it. 

Physicians order nourishing food for those who are infirm, that 
they may gain strength. There is an aliment of surpassing excellence 
well calculated to remove spiritual infirmities and impart vigor to 
the soul. He who communicates frequently will feel less sharply the 
stimulus of anger, envy, uncleanness, and other evil propensities. 
Holy communion quenches the flame of concupiscence ; it is the corn 



The Sacraments, 599 

of the elect and the wine springing forth virgins (Zach. ix. IT). It 
cleanses us from venial, but not from mortal sin ; like fire which con- 
sumes wood and straw, but does not burn stone or iron. It is the 
food and the medicine of the soul; now food and medicine are bene- 
ficial to the sick, but in no wise to the dead. Therefore if after 
confession we commit some venial sin, it is not necessary to go to 
confession again before approaching holy communion. 

4. Holy communion often aifords much refreshment to the soul. 

The manna is said to have had a pleasant taste, like honey. In 
holy communion, St. Thomas Aquinas says we taste sweetness at its 
true source. In the prayer said before benediction is given with the 
Blessed Sacrament, it is declared to contain within itself all sweet- 
ness (Wisd. xvi. 20). The greater the worthiness of the communi- 
cant the greater is the sweetness he experiences in holy communion ; 
but sometimes God withdraws all consolation, even from the saints. 

5. Holy communion sanctifies the body, and implants in it 
the germ of a future glorious resurrection. 

The temporal penalties of sin are cancelled by holy communion ac- 
cording to the measure of our devotion. If those who did but touch 
the hem of Our Lord's garment were cured of whatever infirmities 
they labored under, how much the more shall we be healed of our 
spiritual sickness, who have the privilege of receiving Christ into 
our breast? St. Louis Bertrand used to advise the sick to receive 
holy communion as a means of recovering bodily health. Our Lord 
says : " He that eateth My flesh and drinketh My blood, hath eternal 
life, and I will raise him up at the Last Day" (John vi. 55). The 
body of Christ is the seed of immortality for our flesh. Communion 
represents to us the tree of life, which stood in the midst of Eden. 

The graces above named are the portion of those who re- 
ceive holv communion frequently, and prepare themselves care- 
fully for it. 

The best means of learning to receive Our Lord well is to receive 
Him often, for in everything it is practice that makes perfect. 

Preparation for Holy Communion. 

1. We must make a suitable preparation of body and soul be- 
fore receiving holy communion. 

We must endeavor, before approaching holy communion, to render 
ourselves as much like Our Lord as possible ; for unless we resemble 
Him spiritually no union between Him and us will be practicable. 
Liquids cannot mingle one with another, without they are of the 
same nature; thus wine and water can be mixed, but not water and 
oil. The better our preparation for holy communion, the more 
plentiful the graces we receive from it. Those who make a bad 
preparation for communion, or none at all, draw down on them- 
selves the divine anger. Such persons lose all reverence for the Holy 
Sacrament of the Altar; in fact their faith in the presence of Our 



600 The Means of Grace, 

Lord under the eueharistic veils dies out altogether. He who ap- 
proaches holy communion merely from force of habit, cannot expect 
to receive anything from God. 

2. The manner in which we should prepare our soul is this: 
We must cleanse our souls from mortal sin by confession, perform 
good works, and adorn ourselves with the virtues. 

When a monarch visits a town it is previously cleansed and dec- 
orated. We should do the same when the King of kings comes to 
us; we should purify our conscience by confession and adorn our 
soul by good works. St. Paul says : " Let a man prove himself, and 
so let him eat of that bread and drink of that chalice" (1 Cor. xi. 
28). We must examine our conscience before approaching holy com- 
munion, and that not merely in regard to greater transgressions, but 
also minor offences. The apostles laid their garments upon the ass, 
before they made Our Lord sit thereon; so we should deck ourselves 
with virtues when we prepare to receive Him in communion. Some 
people think more of communicating upon certain festivals, than of 
purifying their hearts by confession, although this is of far greater 
importance;. Wherefore it is not he who communicates often, or he 
who communicates seldom, who should be esteemed, but he who com- 
municates with a clean heart. 

To receive holy communion when one is conscious of having 
committed a mortal sin, is to incur the guilt of sacrilege. 

He who receives holy communion in a state of mortal sin profanes 
the Holy Sacrament ; he is guilty of the body and blood of the Lord 
(1 Cor. xi. 27), that is, his sin is the same as if he had put Our 
Lord to death. The unworthy communicant acts like the Philis- 
tines, who took possession of the ark and placed it close to the image 
of their god Dagon, for he introduces Christ where Satan is. Holy 
communion is like the light, which is salutary to good eyes, but 
hurtful to those that are diseased ; so the Lord's body is a medicine, 
giving spiritual health to the pure of heart, but spiritual death to the 
unclean and evil. Holy communion is like the pillar of the cloud, 
enlightening the Israelites but enveloping the Egyptians in dark- 
ness (Exod. xiv. 20). Wherefore if any man call to mind a mortal 
sin before he communicates, let him go to confession at once, if by 
any means he can do so. If it be impossible, he may communicate, 
but he must confess the sin in question the next time he goes to con- 
fession; for as it was not wilfully omitted, it was remitted with the 
rest by the sacerdotal absolution. 

The consequences of a sacrilegious communion are very ter- 
rible; it produces spiritual blindness, obduracy of heart, and 
brings upon the sinner chastisements both temporal and eternal. 

Satan enters into the unworthy communicant, as he did into 
Judas after his sacrilegious communion (John xiii. 27). If the pos- 
session of the ark brought such grievous afflictions upon the Philis- 
tines; if the profanation of the sacred vessels by Baltassar was so 
bitterly expiated (Dan. v.), what must be the punishment of those 
who lay violent hands on the body of the Lord? The Apostle tells us 



The Sacraments, 601 

that infirmities and death are no iinusual chastisements of unworthy 
communicants (1 Cor. xi. 30). Kemember the awful fate of Judas. 
Terror, despair, hatred of God, the torments the lost suffer in hell, 
begin on earth for the unworthy communicant. He who comes to the 
marriage feast (holy communion) without a wedding garment (sanc- 
tifying grace), shall be cast into excerior darkness (Matt. xxii). St. 
Paul warns the Christians of communicating unworthily when he 
says : " He that eateth and drinketh unworthily eateth and drinketh 
judgment to himself, not discerning the Lord's body " (1 Cor. xi. 29). 

All that is absolutely required for the worthy reception of 
holy communion is to be in a state of grace ; but it is greatly to 
be desired that all unruly attachment to earthly things should 
be completely given up before approaching the Holy Sacrament 
of the Altar. 

" If you are in a state of grace," says St. John Chrysostom, " why 
do you not go to communion, which was instituted with the object of 
enabling you to continue in that state ? " The more we are detachf""" 
from earthly things the greater will be our charity, and the gr' 
our charity the more abundant will be the graces we receive in 
munion. Thus the avaricious, the ambitious, the intemper«'+^ 
who indulge their evil tendencies, will derive little benef^' 
communion. A pure heart is the only fit dwelling -^ 
purity. 

Prayer, acts of self-denial, the works "^ ' " 
works which we ought to practise be-^ 

At least half an hour ought to ^ 
munion. It is advisable to he^ 
should be specially abstem? 
ures and amusements, ay 
perform some works o"'^ 
(in the person of Hi^ 
give thee celestial f - 

Those who r 
virtues in parti- 

ness. 

It is usua^ 

virtues and '< 

these senti" 

Confiteor ' 

of God ' 

St. 

of tV 

are 

mun 

for 

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60^ The Means of Grace. 

not heal them. We ought also to make an act of hope before com- 
municating. When Our Lord was on earth He never sent any one 
away empty who came to Him in trustful confidence. The woman 
who had been afflicted for twelve years was made whole immediately 
upon touching the hem of His garment in faith (Matt. is. 20). We 
ought also to make an act of charity before communicating; for the 
greater our love to God, the greater is His generosity towards us. He 
must be received with love Who out of love gives Himself to us. 
'' Love Him," says St. Augustine, " Who for love of thee comes to 
unite thy mortality to His immortality." We ought also to humble 
ourselves before God before communicating, considering His majesty 
and our misery, and deploring our sinfulness, for God resisteth the 
proud, but to the humble He gives grace (1 Pet. v. 5). Meekness is 
also necessary in those who conununicate, for without it we cannot be 
pleasing to the Lamb of God. 

3. Our body must "be prepared for holy communion by fasting 
from midnight; by dressing in a neat and suitable manner, and 
by a reverent deportment at the time of communion. 

''he heavenly food must be taken before the earthly, for precedence 

rays given to the noblest and most excellent. The body of Our 

'^hen taken down from the cross was laid in a sepulchre wherein 

"d any man been laid. Our bodies must also be cleansed; 

"^^-^e apostles' feet before giving them communion. The 

"^ commanded to wash their clothes before the Ten 

■delivered to them. External cleanliness is sup- 

"■ '^urity. The guests at a marriage have to 

nd shall we come to the Lord's Supper 

of an earthly monarch a certain 

'^ch the more should we behave 

ommunion. 

nunion is a positive law 
Tuse. 

whatever cause may 

ving Viaticum, if 

3 again repeatedly 

kindly allows 
'•bout a well- 
vice of their 
liquid food 
'n houses 
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The Sacraments, 603 

Our dress should be clean and suited to our station when we 
go to communion; that is to say, we should put on better things 
than those in daily wear, but not dress showily. 

To attach importance to dress when approaching the holy table, 
would lead us to overlook what is essential, and mar devotion. Shabby- 
clothes are no shame to the wearer; Christ was poor and He loves 
the poor. He looks at the interior, not the exterior of a man. 

Our demeanor should be reverent when we go to com- 
munion; we should avoid singularity and everything prejudicial 
to devotion. 

When the priest repeats the words : Domine non sum dignus, the 
intending communicant should strike his breast, and rising from his 
knees, go slowly up to the altar-rails without looking about him; 
when the priest advances to give him the sacred Host, let him raise 
his head, close his eyes, open his mouth, and put his tongue forward 
as far as the underlip ; then let him swallow the Host as soon as pos- 
sible, and after a few moments' pause return reverently to his place. 

Behavior after Receiving Holy Communion. 

After receiving communion we should make our thanksgiving, 
and proffer our petitions to almighty God, praying for the Pope, 
for the authorities, secular and ecclesiastical, for our relatives, 
friends, and benefactors, and for the holy souls in purgatory. 

Our thanksgiving oughE to last at least a quarter of an hour. 
Priests recite the Benedicite after Mass. To leave the church after 
communion without thanksgiving would be a very rude act; how ill- 
mannered would he be thought who, when invited to the table of one 
far above him in rank, did not so much as thank his host ! To do so 
is to be like Judas who, after receiving communion, immediately went 
out. St. Philip Neri once sent two acolytes with burning tapers to 
accompany a person whom he observed thus hurrying from the church. 
We ought also to present our petitions to God after communion. 
Queen Esther pleaded with King Assuerus on behalf of the Jewish 
people after the banquet, for she knew this was the most favorable 
moment to make her request, and it was granted her (Esther vii.). 
There is no better time for us to hold converse with God than when 
He is present with us as our Guest. Our prayers have far more weight 
with God after communion than at any other time, because they are 
sanctified by the presence of Our Lord. We have not Him always 
witli us (Mark xiv. 7). " How much those lose," exclaims St. Alphon- 
sus, "who neglect to implore graces after receiving holy com- 
munion ! " 

Xo food should be taken until at least a quarter of an hour 
after receiving communion, when the species of bread are con- 
sumed. 

It is not well to indulge in worldly amusements on the day of 



604 The Means of Grace, 

communion, for by doing so we lose the graces we have received. 
We shall do better if we go to a church, and thus return the visit 
Our Lord has graciously vouchsafed to pay us. 

Spiritual Communion, 

Spiritual communion consists in awakening within the heart a 
lively desire to receive holy communion. 

To make a spiritual communion is a matter of no difficulty; it is 
enough to recollect one's self for a few minutes, to place one's self in 
spirit before the tabernacle, and to say : " Lord Jesus, come, I beseech 
Thee, into my heart." 

We ought to make a spiritual communion during Mass, more 
particularly at the communion of the priest, and also when we 
pay a visit to the Blessed Sacrament. 

We may even communicate spiritually every hour of the day, the 
oftener the better. For this there is no need to fast beforehand, nor 
to obtain permission from our confessor. 

Spiritual communion is the means of enriching the soul with 
many and precious graces. 

Actual communion is compared to a golden, spiritual communion 
to a silver vessel. Our Lord, when on earth, did not heal those only 
to whom He went in person, but those also who were absent, and who 
ardently desired His presence. Remember how He acted in regard 
to the centurion's servant; He does the same now as He did then 
(Cochem). The Council of Trent says (13, 8): "Those who eat in 
desire that heavenly bread, are by a lively faith which worketh by 
charity, made sensible of the fruit and usefulness thereof." Spirit- 
ual communion is the best preparation for sacramental communion. 
Our Lord did not come to earth until His advent was ardently de- 
sired; and in like manner He is reluctant to visit the soul that does 
not earnestly long to receive Him. 



4, THE SACRAMENT OF PENANCE, 

The Nature and the Necessity of Penance, 

. As soon as the fish swallows the bait, he feels the smart. So it 
is with the sinner. Yet what God has laid upon us as a chastisement 
He has made the means of our salvation ; He sends suffering as the 
chastisement of sin; but by suffering we can be delivered from sin. 

Interior sorrow for sin, accompanied by sincere turning from 
creatures and turning to God, is generally called penance. 

As a matter of fact, our whole life ought to be one continued pen- 
ance. Our Lord says: "Unless you shall do penance, you shall all 
likewise perish" (Luke xiii. 3). And again: "Woe to you that now 



Tlie Sacraments, 605 

laugh, for you shall mourn and weep" (Luke vi. 25). He often 
threatens those who only desire to enjoy life, with eternal perdition 
(John xii. 25). No man, even should he not be conscious of any sin, 
ought to depart out of this world without doing penance (St. Augus- 
tine). St. Jerome says we can no more attain everlasting life without 
penance, than we can get at the kernel of a nut without breaking the 
shell. The greatest saints used to perform severe penances for their 
slightest faults. 

Our Lord instituted the Sacrament of Penance on the day 
of His resurrection, when He spoke these words to His apostles: 
"Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven; and whose 
sins you shall retain, they are retained " (John xx. 23). 

With these words Christ on the one hand imparted to the apostles 
the power to remit sins, and on the other laid upon the faithful the 
injunction to confess their sins to a priest in order to obtain the re- 
mission of them. The conditions under which forgiveness of sins is 
to be obtained, are indicated in the following instances: (1), the cure 
of the man sick of the palsy (Matt, ix.) ; sin is a spiritual paralysis; 
when sin is forgiven, a penance is imposed on the penitent, as the 
paralytic was commanded to carry his bed; (2), The cleansing of 
the leper (Matt, viii.) ; sin is a spiritual leprosy; the sinner must 
show himself to the priest, who will declare him to be clean by God's 
authority; (3), The absolving of the penitent Magdalen, who cast 
herself at Our Lord's feet, and heard from His lips the words : " Thy 
sins are forgiven thee" (Luke vii.). The sinner now acts as she did; 
filled with contrition, he casts himself at the feet of Christ's repre- 
sentative, and obtains the pardon of his transgressions. 

1. In the Sacrament of Penance the repentant Christian con- 
fesses his sins to a duly authorized priest, who, standing in the 
place of God, pronounces the absolution by means of which they 
are forgiven. 

The method of confession is this: The penitent, kneeling down 
in the confessional, makes the sign of the cross and receives the 
priest's blessing. He recites the first part of the Confiteor, then ac- 
cuses himself of his sins, and repeats the concluding part. The 
priest asks him any questions that may be necessary, gives him a short 
instruction, sets him a penance, gives him absolution and dismisses 
him with his blessing. The penitent then withdraws to one of the 
benches to say his penance, and prepare for communion, if he is 
about to communicate. The words of the sacerdotal absolution are 
these : " I absolve thee from thy sins in the name of the Father, and 
of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." The absolution is a judicial act 
(Council of Trent, 14, 9). Like the lightning, it consumes the sin 
at a flash. Even when the priest withholds the absolution, he gives 
the blessing. A crucifix always hangs in the confessional, sometimes 
a picture is added, calculated to excite contrition, such as the prodigal 
son, the repentant Magdalen, the sorrowing Peter, etc. In very old 
confessionals one may sometimes see a rose carved, as an emblem of 
the silence which is binding upon the confessor. The ancient 
Romans used to suspend a rose over the dining-table, to warn their 



The Means of Grace, 

guests not to indulge in any confidential conversation in tlie presence 
of strangers. 

2. The Sacrament of Penance is indispensably necessary for 
those who have fallen into sin after Baptism, for without this 
sacrament they are unable to recover the justice they have lost 
(Council of Trent, 14, 1; 6, 29). 

" The Sacrament of Penance is, for those who have fallen after 
Baptism, as necessary unto salvation as Baptism itself is for those 
who have not yet been regenerated " (Council of Trent, 14, 2). Hence 
the Fathers term this sacrament: "the second baptism," or "the 
plank after shipwreck." By Baptism we embark upon the ship that 
is bound for the port of salvation. By mortal sin we are shipwrecked ; 
and in this case our only hope of rescue is by clinging to a plank. 
The Sacrament of Penance is that plank. STo one who has been 
bitten by the old serpent, the devil, can be cured, unless he discovers 
his hurt to the physician. Through pride the sinner places himself 
at a distance from God ; only by humility can he return to God. 

The man who has fallen into mortal sin ought to approach 
the Secrament of Penance as speedily as possible. 

A dislocated limb must be set right at once; if not, a swelling 
forms and the cure becomes difficult. If a vessel leaks, the pumps 
must be set at work immediately, or the water will cause the ship to 
sink; if a house is on fire, the conflagration must be got under 
promptly, or the house will be burned down. If any one has taken 
poison, he must swallow an emetic forthwith, or he will lose his life. 
So it is with mortal sin. The Church does not appoint a fixed time 
for the forgiveness of sin; the sinner may at any time make his 
peace with God. Do not presume upon the long-suffering of the Most 
High! The longer you postpone your penance, the more rigorously 
will you be judged; the more severe will be your punishment. Those 
who put off repentance until the hour of death, often have no oppor- 
tunity allowed them to reconcile themselves with their Maker (Job 
xxii. 16). It is the just penalty of sin that he who would not do what 
is right when he could, cannot do it when he will. Our Lord says: 
" You shall seek Me and shall not find Me " (John vii. 34) . No one 
knows how soon the time of grace may end. It is a sorry thing when 
a man begins to buy what he needs just as the yearly market is over. 
One of the thieves upon the cross was forgiven, that nobody might 
despair; but only one, that nobody might presume, and put off re- 
pentance until the hour of death. St. Bernard declares death-bed 
repentances to be, not examples, but miracles of grace. Those who 
postpone repentance will meet with the fate of the fig-tree which 
Our Lord, finding no fruit on it, cursed. " Trust not," says St. 
Augustine, "to the morrow; for thou knowest not whether there will 
be any morrow for thee." Contrition, moreover, is of little value 
when a man has no more opportunity to sin ; in that case you do not 
abandon sin, but sin abandons you. Finally, on the approach of death, 
the sinner in his alarm becomes bewildered and frightened; he is like 
a traveller who, just as night closes down, discovers that he has lost 
his way. Besides this, the long habit of sin deprives a man of the 



Tlie Sacraments, 607 

power to do penance ; he is like one who has slept heavily, and, though 
he wishes to get up, cannot pull himself together and rise from his 
bed. l:so one considers it safe to sleep in a half-ruined house, yet, 
frail as is your body, you do not scruple to live on, for weeks, months, 
nay, years, in a state of mortal sin. 

3. Let no one be deterred by a feeling of shame from confess- 
ing his sins ; the priest dare not, under any pretext, reveal what 
is said in the confessional, and he is ever ready to receive the 
contrite sinner kindly. 

Furthermore, let him who is ashamed to confess to the priest 
now, remember that one day he will be put to confusion before 
the whole world, and condemned to endless misery. 

The priest dare not, even to save his life, disclose the secrets of 
the confessional. We shall speak further on of the seal of confes- 
sion. The penitent is always received with kindness by the priest. 
Some one who had confessed several grievous sins to St. Francis of 
Sales, afterwards said to him : " What can you think of me now ? " 
The saint replied : " I think you must be a very holy person, for only 
the saints have made so good a confession." Nothing gives a priest 
greater joy than to see that a penitent has made a full and sincere 
confession of all his misdeeds, for then he knows that his conversion 
is real. The priest is like a fisherman, who, the bigger the fish he 
catches, the better pleased is he. God frequently calls those who 
have themselves been great sinners to the care of souls, in order 
that they may deal more gently with transgressors. For he who 
knows himself to be guilty of heinous offences will be lenient towards 
those who have also offended. Shrink not, therefore, from confessing 
your sins to one who is himseK a sinner; who perhaps is more deeply 
stained than you are. Christ did not give the power of the keys to 
angels, but to men. He who is ashamed of confessing to the priest 
will one day be put to confusion before the whole world, and be con- 
demned to endless misery. To such a one God says : " I will show thy 
nakedness to the nations, and thy shame to kingdoms " (JSTahum iii. 
5). Far better is it to confess one's misdeeds to the servant of God, 
who has compassion with the sinner, than to be put to shame in the 
sight of all men; far better willingly to acknowledge them once for 
all, than to do so compulsorily throughout all eternity. What man 
conceals, God reveals; what man confesses, God suppresses. Who 
would not rather go to confession here, than burn forever in hell? 
It is the devil who makes us timid and shamefaced in regard to con- 
fession. When we are about to sin he takes all fear from us, but 
when it is a question of acknowledging our offences, he inspires us 
with alarm and embarrassment. How else can it be explained that 
men who on the battle-field face death without fear, tremble on ap- 
proaching the confessional? The early Christians did not hesitate 
to confess their sins openly before all the faithful; St. Augustine 
wrote a book of confessions, in which he acquaints all the world with 
his transgressions. As the sick man, if he has any sense, will gladly 
swallow the bitter potion which he hopes will restore him to health, 
so he who is spiritually sick ought not to shrink from the penance, 
however severe, which will cure the malady of his soul. 



608 The Means of Grace. 

4. He who from a sense of shame conceals a mortal sin in 
confession, does not obtain forgiveness, but only adds to his other 
sins that of sacrilege; and exposes himself to the grave risk of 
dying impenitent. 

Moreover all his subsequent confessions are invalid, so long 
as he does not confess over again all the sins of which he has 
been guilty since his last valid confession. 

The devil acts like the wolf, who seizes the lamb by the throat, 
that it may not cry out; the devil stops the sinner's mouth, that he 
m^ay not confess his misdeeds. He who conceals one mortal sin in 
confession does not obtain forgiveness. * If all the locks on a door 
are unfastened except one, the door cannot be opened; so it is with 
the soul; unless every mortal sin, those locks of the soul, are sub- 
jected to the power of the keys, wielded by the priest, the door of 
reconciliation cannot be unclosed. Moreover, to conceal a mortal 
sin in confession is to commit the grievous sin of sacrilege, which is 
a profanation and contempt of divine things. By concealing one sin, 
a man also embitters his life. Sin unconfessed is like indigestible 
food, which lies in the stomach and ruins the health. " Sin con- 
cealed," says St. Augustine, " scourges the conscience, lacerates the 
heart, and fills the soul with anguish and terror." Whoso lies in the 
confessional deceives himseK, not God. To conceal a mortal sin in 
confession is to merit the danger of dying impenitent. Sin con- 
cealed is fatal to the life of the soul ; it is like a wound which bleeds 
inwardly and causes death. St. Antoninus, Archbishop of Florence, 
speaks of a woman who purposely omitted a mortal sin in confession, 
and then made a sacrilegious communion; later on she repeatedly 
went to confession with the intention of revealing that sin, but every 
time failed to do so, through a false shame. Even when she lay on 
her deathbed, she could not prevail upon herself to mention the 
long-concealed sin. Just before breathing her last, she shrieked 
aloud : " I am damned, for ever since my youth I have concealed a 
mortal sin ! " What a terrible thing it is, thus to abuse the 
Sacrament of Penance ! One sacrilegious confession renders all sub- 
sequent ones invalid. In order to return to a state of grace, under 
such circumstances, it is necessary not only to confess the sin wit- 
tingly concealed, but all the other sins mentioned in the first invalid 
confession, as well as all that have been subsequently committed, 
whether they have been confessed or not. It is the same with con- 
fession as with a sum in arithmetic. If one has made the omission 
of a single figure in the first row, the total will be wrong, and the 
whole must be reckoned up over again. In the same way, if a man 
has buttoned his coat wrong at the top, all the other buttons must 
be undone to set that one right. Hence St. Bonaventure gives this 
advice : " Begin with the sin which it costs thee most to confess, and 
afterwards all the rest will come easy to thee." When once the gen- 
eral is slain, the whole army will speedily be routed. If you find it 
very difficult to confess any sin in particular, say at least to the 
confessor : " There is something more, but I car not bring myself to 
tellit." 



The Sacraments, 609 



The Confessor. 

1. No priest can give absolution who has not received the 
faculties for hearing confessions from the bishop of the diocese. 

To none but the apostles and their successors did Our Lord give 
the power to forgive sins. To them alone did He say after His 
resurrection : " Receive ye the Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall 
forgive, they are forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, 
they are retained" (John xx. 23). He commanded the apostles to 
loose the bands of Lazarus, after he had risen from the grave, to in- 
dicate that to them was given the power to unbind. This power is 
called the power of the keys, because by it the gates of heaven, closed 
against the sinner, are reopened to him. Thus the confessor is the 
doorkeeper of heaven. The bishops can confer the right to forgive 
sins to such priests as they deem fitted to hear confession. A priest, 
as a rule, has faculties for the whole diocese in which the bishop has 
given him an appointment. 

2. Priests who are duly authorized to hear confessions have 
not power to absolve from all sins, since there are certain sins 
which the Pope or the bishop has reserved to himself for judgment. 
(Council of Trent, 14, 11). 

They can only absolve from these sins if jurisdiction be de- 
livered to them by the Holy See or the bishop of the diocese. 

These are called reserved cases. The bishops are accustomed to 
reserve to themselves the absolution from more heinous crimes, such 
as apostasy, perjury, murder, arson; the object of this is to deter the 
faithful more effectually from the commission of such crimes. Secular 
magistrates cannot pass sentence on all criminals; many cases 
have to be sent up to a higher court for judgment. But 
at the point of death all priests may absolve all penitents whatever 
from every kind of sin or censure (Council of Trent, 14, 7). In places 
of pilgrimage the priests can usually absolve in cases reserved for the 
bishop; and in many dioceses they are empowered to do so during 
missions, at Easter, or when a general confession is made. 

3. In the confessional the priest stands in the place of God; 
therefore the penitent is bound to yield him obedience. 

If Our Lord Himself sat in one confessional, and an ordinary 
priest in another, the one would not remit sins more fully than the 
other. Why is this? We call the priest who hears confessions 
" Father " because he represents our heavenly Father. For the same 
reason he deals with the penitent gently and indulgently, like a 
father. We must obey the confessor, for it is not a man whom we obey 
in his person, but God, Who has said : " He that heareth you, heareth 
Me." If we obey our confessor, we may be sure that we shall not have 
to give account of our actions to God; for should the confessor be 
at error, there is no blame attaching to the penitent; he cannot do 
Nv^ong in obeying. Those who wovM make progress in perfection 



610 The Means of Grace, 

should obey their confessor as they would obey the voice of God, even 
should the practice of some devotion or penance be forbidden them. 
St. John of the Cross says that to rebel against the dictum of the 
confessor manifests pride and want of faith. 

In the confessional the priest exercises three functions: The 
office of a teacher, a physician, and a judge. 

In his office of teacher the priest has to instruct the penitent if 
he perceives that he is in ignorance of something important for him 
to know. Like a guardian angel, he directs the traveller in the right 
way. In his office of physician he listens to the penitent, who is sick 
with the disease of sin, while he gives an account of his condition, 
as the physician listens to the patient describing his bodily pains. 
He gives him the remedy to effect his spiritual cure, as the physician 
prescribes medicines for those who are sick in body. In his office of 
judge, he must decide whether the penitent is or is not to be absolved; 
in the former case he gives him absolution, in the latter he with- 
holds it. 

4. TJnder no possible conditions may the priest repeat anything 
out of the confessional. 

This obligation to secrecy is called the seal of confession. Not 
even to save his life may the priest reveal what has been said in con- 
fession. St. John Nepomucene could not be prevailed upon either by 
menaces or torture to disclose the queen's confession to King Wen- 
ceslas. That monarch accordingly ordered him to be thrown into 
the Moldau, and five lights floating over the water marked the spot 
where his corpse lay. Not even to avert a terrible calamity may the 
priest reveal what has been said in confession. A king once asked 
the court chaplain whether, if any one confessed that he intended to 
assassinate the king, he would make it known. " On no account," the 
clergyman replied. " Then," said the king, " my life is not safe." 
" It would be less so," the priest rejoined, " but for confession, and 
the seal of confession." The obligation of secrecy also exists in re- 
gard to the penitent. A priest's servant once confessed to him that 
he had stolen his corn; the priest was obliged to leave the key in 
the barn-door the same as before. The seal of confession must be 
observed no less strictly in a court of justice, for the divine law is 
higher than human law. The penalty for violating the seal is depriva- 
tion for the remainder of the priest's life, besides severe ecclesiastical 
punishments. We hear from time to time of bad priests who aposta- 
tize, but never has one been known to fall so low as to break the seal 
of confession. The obligation of secrecy is for the protection of the 
penitent as well as to safeguard the Sacrament of Penance. The peni- 
tent may give the priest permission to make use of what he has told 
him in confession, but the confessor must be very chary of availing 
himself of that permission. He must only do so when something 
really important is at stake, and there is no risk of thereby bringing 
confession into discredit. The seal of confession does not bind the 
priest if any one speaks outside the confessional of what he has pre- 
viously confessed. 



The Sacraments, 611 

5. Every Catholic is perfectly free to choose his own confessor. 

The slightest coercion in regard to confession is forbidden, for 
fear of leading any one to conceal a sin. St. Teresa says : " Oh, what 
mischief the evil one is enabled to do, if force is put upon any one in 
regard to confession ! " Accordingly no one is obliged to go to confes- 
sion to his parish priest (unless it be at Easter, as is the rule in some 
places) ; every one is at liberty to approach the sacraments wherever 
he chooses, and the priest may not refuse to hear any man's confession 
because he belongs to another parish. Monks are required to go to 
confession to a member of their Order. Nuns have their confessor ap- 
pointed by the bishops ; yet besides the ordinary confessor, the bishop 
or other superior has to offer them twice or thrice a year an extra- 
ordinary confessor whose duty it is to hear them (Council of Trent, 
25, 10). No one can prevent them from making their confession to 
him. 

Whoso desires to make progress in perfection must place 
himself under the guidance of some particular confessor (St. 
Philip Neri). 

If a man wants to learn a profession or trade, he must have a 
master to instruct him; how much more he who wishes to acquire 
that most difficult of all professions, Christian perfection! He who 
would ascend a high mountain must have an experienced guide; how 
much more he who would scale the heights of Christian perfection! 
Choice should not be made of a confessor without mature deliberation 
and fervent prayer. For twenty years St. Teresa failed to find a 
spiritual Father who understood her; she persevered in prayer, and 
St. John of Avila was sent to her. A wise confessor should be chosen ; 
one would not consult the first doctor one met with about one's bodily 
ailments; nor in legal difficulties would one take the advice of any 
but a good solicitor, xind should one use less precaution in a matter 
on which one's eternity depends? One must also choose a confessor 
in whom one has entire confidence. The devil ruins many souls by 
sowing distrust between the penitent and his confessor. One's con- 
fessor should not be changed without good reason, any more than one 
would leave a doctor who has attended one for long, and who knows 
one's constitution. It is, however, well to go to some one else oc- 
casionally, so as not to get into servile subjection to one individual. 

The Effects of Penance, 

It is not any easy matter to do penance; confession, the sincere 
acknowledgment of sins of which we are ashamed, in itself requires 
great self-conquest. On this account penance is liberally rewarded 
by God. Confession is, moreover, an act of profound humility, and 
to the humble God giveth grace (1 Pet. v. 5). 

By worthily receiving the Sacrament of Penance we obtain 
the following graces: 

1. The guilt of sin is remitted and the debt of eternal punish- 



612 The Means of Grace, 

ment; yet there remains the debt of temporal punishment to be 
discharged (Council of Trent, 6, 30; 14, 12). 

God says in Holy Scripture: "If the wicked do penance for all 
the sins which he hath committed, he shall live, and not die. I will 
not remember all his iniquities that he hath done " (Ezech. xviii. 21). 
Thus Our Lord said to Magdalen : " Thy sins are forgiven thee " 
(Luke vii. 48). To those who confess their sins Christ is not a judge, 
but an advocate and protector. In the Last Judgment the sins that 
have been expiated by penance will be no more remembered against 
the sinner; they alone will be hidden, when all else is revealed. 
Seneca used to say : " He who repents of the wrong he has done is no 
longer guilty." Through the absolution the debt of eternal punish- 
ment is changed into a temporal debt. God acts like the monarch 
who commutes capital punishment into imprisonment for a term of 
years. Holy Scripture furnishes many examples in which God im- 
posed a penalty for sin forgiven : He forgave Adam, yet He cast him 
out of paradise and laid severe penances upon him. Moses, who 
offended God by not believing His word, was pardoned, but not per- 
mitted to enter the Land of Promise (Numb. xx. 12). The Jews 
who murmured in the wilderness were forgiven upon Moses' interces- 
sion, but were condemned to die in the desert (Numb. xiv.). David 
was forgiven when he had committed two mortal sins, but the child that 
was born to him died (2 Kings xii. 14). No sin is left unpunished; 
either we punish ourselves by doing penance, or God lays chastise- 
ments upon us. For every sin satisfaction must be made either in 
this world or in purgatory; the more we have sinned here, the more 
we shall suffer hereafter. Our transgressions are rightly called debts ; 
as debts must be paid, so sins must be blotted out. 

The debt of temporal punishment for sin must be discharged 
either in this world or in purgatory. 

In this world we make satisfaction by performing the penances 
enjoined on us by the priest in confession ; by works voluntarily un- 
dertaken, such as prayer, fasting, almsdeeds, or other pious acts, and 
also by bearing patiently the punishments inflicted on us by God; 
for instance, accepting death willingly, and finally by gaining in- 
dulgences (Council of Trent, 14, 13). 

God in His wisdom never leaves sin wholly unpunished, lest 
we should think lightly of it (St. Augustine). 

At baptism all the punishment due to sin is remitted, but in the 
Sacrament of Penance this is not so. Sin committed after baptism 
is much more grievous than that which is committed before; those 
who sin before baptism sin in ignorance, but after baptism in malice, 
for they have been enlightened by the Holy Spirit, and consequently 
have a better knowledge of sin. Those who are regenerate, more- 
over be it remembered, when they sin knowingly violate the temple 
of God (1 Cor. iii. 17), and are guilty of breaking their promise; 
for by sin on the one hand they banish the Holy Ghost Who dwells 
within them, and on the other hand they break the solemn vows 
taken at baptism. A good father forgives his child's disobedience 



The Sacraments. 613 

the first time, if lie promises amendment ; but if the child repeats the 
offence, his father forgives him, but does not this time let him go 
unpunished. God acts in a similar manner; at baptism He remits 
both the sin and its penaltv. hut afterwards He is not so indulgent 
to the transgressor. 

The more perfect our contrition, the greater will be the 
amount of the punishment remitted to us. 

"Many sins are forgiven her, for she loved much," Our Lord 
said of Magdalen. Sometimes God touches the heart of man so 
profoundly that his contrition avails for the complete remission both 
of sin and its penalty. 

2. The Holy Spirit returns to the repentant sinner, and im- 
parts to him sanctifying grace; and the merits of all the good 
works he formerly performed while in a state of grace are re- 
stored to him again. 

The contrite sinner, like the prodigal son, receives a beautiful 
robe, sanctifying grace, and a ring is placed on his finger, a token of 
divine charity. Traces of our sins will, it is true, always be apparent 
on the white robe of sanctifying grace, but having been washed out 
by penance, they will not disfigure its beauty. Penance is a ladder 
whereby we may ascend again to the place whence we have fallen. 
The heart that is full of sin is the habitation of swine; by penance 
it becomes the dwelling-place of the Most High. Penance is a 
crucible wherein base metal is changed to silver. It would indeed 
be a miracle, if by a single word some one were to make the black 
skin of the negro white. Yet a greater wonder is worked by the 
words of absolution, spoken over the penitent sinner, for thereby 
the soul, which through sin was black as ink, becomes white as snow. 
When the sinner is restored to a state of grace, as a matter of course 
he is again a child of God, an heir of heaven, capable of performing 
meritorious works. Another effect of penance is that the merit of 
all good works done formerly in a state of grace is recovered. For 
the merit of all those works was lost through mortal sin (Ezech. xviii. 
24) ; not because God withdrew their merit on account of the 
mortal man, but because man made them of no effect. So a meadow, 
parched by long drought, recovers its verdure under the influence of 
gentle rain and soft sunshine. 

If before confession we are already in a state of grace, we 
receive an increase of grace. 

Any one who is free from mortal sin, or who has perfect contri- 
tion, is in a state of grace before confession. The greater the de- 
gree of sanctifying grace we possess here, the higher will be our 
degree of glory hereafter; hence let no one say it is useless for him 
to go to confession, as he has no mortal sin on his conscience. ThosG 
who speak thus are, alas ! too often living in mortal sin. 

3. Through the indwelling of the Holy Ghost we obtain great 
peace of mind, nay, great consolations, if our conversion be sincere. 



614 The Means of Grace. 

Penance gives us peace of mind. The Holy Ghost is a com- 
forter (John xiv. 26). When we have relieved our soul by confession, 
a deep peace ensues, as the sea became calm as soon as the sinful 
prophet Jonas had been cast out of the ship. The Sacrament of 
Penance distils balm on the wounds of the soul; it relieves us of a 
heavy burden. The restoration of one's peace of mind often has a 
beneficial effect upon the body, and contributes to the recovery of 
health. Hence the saints used to exhort the sick to receive the 
sacraments. To the contrite sinner great consolations are often 
given. Our Lord says : " Blessed are they that mourn, for they shall 
be comforted" (Matt. v. 6). On the return of the prodigal son, 
his father caused the fatted calf to be killed, and a merry banquet 
was held, with music and dancing (Luke xv.). Thus God acts with 
regard to the repentant sinner whose conversion is real; He makes 
him to abound in consolations and spiritual delights. In fact the 
grievous sinner seems in reality to fare better than the just man; 
remember what the elder son said to his father respecting the re- 
ception given to the prodigal (Luke xv. 29). By these consolations 
God encourages us to walk more resolutely in the toilsome path of 
virtue ; for the penitent has a sharp conflict to wage with his corrupt 
nature. When first we enter upon the way of holiness, God lavishes 
these consolations upon us; later on He withdraws them, lest they 
should prove prejudicial to us. Therefore we ought to render Him 
thanks when He deprives us of them. 

4. The Holy Spirit imparts to us the strength necessary to 
overcome sin. 

The converted sinner is like one recovering from an illness; his 
former strength has to be regained. By penance the broken limb is 
set, and its power restored. The might of the Holy Spirit is com- 
municated to the newly-converted, to enable him to resist evil. 
Confession serves to keep us from falling into sin in future, as well 
to cleanse us from past offences. Converted sinners are generally 
faithful and zealous servants of God. On this account Our Lord 
says that " there is joy in heaven upon one that doth penance, more 
than upon ninety-nine just persons" (Luke xv. 7). Which is to be 
preferred, the soldier who has evaded the battle, or the one who has 
fled from the field, but returns to the attack, to repair his fault, and 
has valiantly routed the enemy? The former is the tepid Christian, 
the latter the fervent penitent. 

Yet these graces are only given if the Sacrament of Penance 
is received worthily; they are given abundantly if the sacra- 
ment is received frequently. 

The more often a house is purified the cleaner it is ; so it is with 
the soul of the Christian. The more frequently he i<oes to con- 
fession, the more thoroughly he casts off the yoke of the devil; for 
as a bird does not generally return to build its nest again in a place 
whence it has been driven away, so the evil one is not so prompt to 
molest the soul whence he has been expelled by confession. Confes- 
sion once a year suffices to make one a member of the Catholic 
Church, but it is not sufficient for the welfare of the soul. As well 



TJie Sacraments, 615 

might one expect a house to be clean that was only swept out once 
a year. The Christian who only goes annually to confession is like 
Absalom, who only had his hair polled once a year (2 Kings xiv. 26) ; 
in the hour of temptation he is in danger of being caught and held 
fast, as Absalom was in the branches of the oak. 



The Worthy Reception of the Sacrament of Penance. 

No rule can be laid down here, as in regard to holy communio-n, 
concerning the time to be employed in preparation. The reality of 
our contrition, not the length of our previous preparation, is what 
is of true importance. However, a few minutes are not enough. 
" Noe was a hundred years building the ark," says St. Thomas 
Aquinas, " and thinkest thou in a brief moment to construct the ark 
which is to save thee from temporal and eternal perdition ? " 

In order to receive the Sacrament of Penance worthily, we 
must do as follows: 

Since we sin in our heart, by our lips, and in our actions, we 
must atone for it by the sorrow which is felt in the heart, expressed 
by the lips, accomplished in our actions. We must do as the prodigal 
did: as soon as he experienced the gracious operation of the Holy 
Ghost, he thought over his misdeeds, and acknowledged them (exam- 
ination of conscience). He saw how ungrateful he had been towards 
his father, and was truly grieved at heart (contrition). He deter- 
mined to return to his father and begin a fresh life at home (resolu- 
tion of amendment). He went back to his father, fell at his feet, 
confessed his fault and implored forgiveness (confession). He said 
he would no longer take the place of a son, but of a servant (satis- 
faction). The father fell on his neck and kissed him (absolution). 
Then followed a joyous repast (communion). 

1. We must examine our conscience, i.e., we must carefully 
consider what sins we have committed and not yet confessed. 

We must make as careful a scrutiny as if we were immediately 
to appear before the judgment seat of God. If our examination is 
insufficient, the Sacrament of Penance may conduce to our damna- 
tion, rather than to our salvation. Yet we must not be over-anxious, 
as some scrupulous persons are, for God does not require from us 
what is out of our power. The examination of conscience is most 
important, for by it we learn to know ourselves, and this is the be- 
ginning of all improvement. One can no more acknowledge and 
overcome a fault of which one is not aware, than one can cure a 
malady of the existence of which one is ignorant. Most men are 
wanting in self-knowledge. There are many who search into the 
secrets of nature, who obsei*ve the course of the stars and the laws 
of motion, but who know nothing about themselves, and never look 
into their own heart. They are to be commiserated, despite their 
learning and their fame, because they pay no heed to their most 
glaring faults. The Creator has placed a book in the hands of every 
man, his conscience; study this book diligently, for of all your li- 



616 The Means of Grace, 

brary it is tlie only one whicli you can take with you into eternity. 
Self-knowledge leads to the knowledge of God. 

Before examination of conscience let us invoke the aid of the 
Holy Spirit, that He may enlighten us. 

"We can find a thing that is in a dark room much more quickly 
if we bring a light with us; and it is the same when we search out 
our sins. When the sun shines into a room we notice a thousand 
motes which were unobservable before ; so the soul, when illuminated 
by the Spirit of God, sees the slightest imperfections. Self-knowl- 
edge is a gift of God, which we can obtain by prayer alone. The 
eye sees everything but itself ; it is the same with our spiritual sight ; 
it is quick in discerning the faults of others, and slow to see its 
own. It is well to examine one's conscience in solitude, for there 
the Holy Spirit speaks to the heart (Osee ii. 14). 

When examining our conscience we must put aside self-love 
and earnestly endeavor to acquaint ourselves with our faults. 

Many sick people will not allow that there is anything serious the 
matter with them, and sinners often do the same. This arises from 
self-love, and self-complacency, on account of the advantages they 
imagine themselves to possess, both natural and acquired. Some 
even count their faults as virtues; they think arrogance to be man- 
liness, deceitfulness to be prudence, etc., like some mothers who are 
so infatuated about their children that they think all their faults to 
be praiseworthy qualities. In examining his conscience, let a man 
look on himself as his own enemy; enemies have a sharp eye for one 
another's feelings. 

In examining our conscience, it is well to go through the 
Ten Commandments, the precepts of the Church, and the deadly 
sins. 

Children may ask themselves: (1), Have I forgotten my prayers 
or been inattentive at them? (2), Have I uttered the name of God, 
or spoken of holy things irreverently, or said any bad words? (3), 
Have I done servile work on Sundays or holydays of obligation? 
have I missed hearing Mass, or behaved badly in church? or eaten 
meat on Fridays? (4), Have I been rude or disobedient to my pa- 
rents? (5), Have I been unkind to others, struck them, or led them 
to do wrong? provoking them to anger? (6), Have I indulged any 
thought, or spoken any words or done any deeds of impurity? (7), 
Have I ever taken what was not mine, and if so, given it back to the 
owner? have I injured or deceived any one? (8), Have I told a false- 
hood, accused any one wrongly, abused any one, or told of his faults ? 
(9 and 10), Have I coveted another person's goods? or been proud, 
given way to anger, or greediness, or been idle at school or at work ? 

In regard to mortal sins, we must remember how often we 
have been guilty of them. 

All the mortal sins of which the penitent is conscious after a 
diligent examination of himself, must needs be enumerated in confes- 



Tlie Sacraments, 617 

sion (Council of Trent, 11, 5, 7). If the exact number of times cannot 
he remembered the approximate nimiber must at least be stated. 

It is not necessary, though it is advisable, to examine one's 
self in regard to venial sins. 

Venial sins, though rightly and profitably declared in confession, 
may be omitted without guilt (Council of Trent, 14, 5). The most 
usual defect in the examination of conscience is that the penitent 
keeps back certain shameful sins, and is careful to search out slight- 
er ones. Such persons are like the Pharisees, who strain out a gnat 
and swallow a camel (Matt, xxiii. 24). Hence it is that many do not 
benefit at all from frequent confession. How many apparently pious 
people will take their sins with them to eternity ! 

We must also consider whether there are circumstances 
which alter or aggravate the sin we confess. 

All those circumstances which change the quality and nature of 
the sin are to be explained in confession (Council of Trent, 14, 5). 
For instance, if a man has taken another's goods by violence, it is not 
enought to say : " I stole ;" for robbery with violence and theft are 
two different sins. If anything was stolen in a church, this must also 
be mentioned. 

We ought to examine our conscience every evening in order 
to render our examination easier before confession. 

If a man will not do the necessary repairs of his house as they are 
wanted, it will become dilapidated and require thorough renovation; 
so it is with the soul, if its condition is not continually seen to and 
amended. If a master looks through his steward's accounts daily, 
they do not get into disorder, and we must do the same with our con- 
science if we would keep it right. Daily examination is very profit- 
able ; it guards us from falling into mortal sin. If a merchant makes 
up his debit and credit account every day, he is not liable to get 
deeply into debt. Daily examination keeps our conscience pure, and 
conduces to moral perfection. St. Ignatius asserts it to be more im- 
portant than prayer. If a king knew that his enemies were con- 
cealed in a certain quarter of his dominions, he would assuredly 
search out their hiding-place and frustrate their schemes. You have 
foes within you, your unruly passions; search them out daily, and 
Vanquish them with the sword of sorrow. It is not enough merely 
fe gain a knowledge of our faults, we ought earnestly to deplore them 
SUd endeavor to overcome them by good resolutions. 

2. We must truly repent of our sins, that is, we must grieve 
from our heart that we have offended God by them, and the 
thought of offending Him must be abhorrent to us. 

As instances of true contrition, we may mention Magdalen, who 
fell at Our Lord's feet weeping (Luke vii.) ; St. Peter, who after 
he had denied Christ, went out and wept bitterly (Matt. xxvi. 75) ; 
David, who when the prophet Nathan had awakened him to a sense 



618 The Means of Grace. 

of sin, lay upon the ground and did neither eat nor drink (2 Kings 
xii.), but cried: " Have mercy on me, O God, according to Thy great 
mercy; and according to the multitude of Thy tender mercies blot 
out my iniquity. A contrite and humbled heart, O God, Thou will 
not despise" (Ps. L). Kepentance, unless accompanied by trust in 
God's mercy, would be despair. Remember Judas' repentance. True 
contrition is also sorrow of soul. An external action alone, such as 
the recitation of a certain formula of prayer, wailing like that of 
the Jewish women, rending of garments (Joel ii. 13), do not consti- 
tute repentance. Exterior grief without inward grief is mere hyp- 
ocrisy. But interior heartfelt contrition shows itself exteriorly, 
for we mortals can rarely prevent all outward manifestation of what 
we feel inwardly. True repentance has reference to God; hence we 
call it supernatural, because it proceeds from faith in an unseen, 
supernatural world. Sorrow for sin because of its disastrous conse- 
quences is no true contrition ; it is a natural sentiment, without merit 
before God. The cruel King Antiochus Epiphanus bewailed his 
wicked deeds when he was eaten by worms; but not because he had 
offended God (2 Mach. ix. 13). In like manner a gambler, a 
drunkard, a criminal who is arrested, may regret his folly when he 
perceives the evil resulting from it. Temporal calamities may be the 
occasion, but not the motive of our sorrow. True repentance implies 
profound detestation of sin, or a complete abandonment of sin; it 
is more a matter of the will than of the feeling. " If," says St. Augus- 
tine, " that which formerly caused thee joy and pleasure, now fills thy 
soul with bitterness, and that which formerly thou didst enjoy is now 
a torture to thee, then know that thy repentance is real." That is 
true conversion when a man turns to God with his whole heart, and 
detaches himself completely from earthly things. Penance is worth- 
less if it produces no amendment. To him who is truly penitent, the 
thought of offending God is abhorrent. Repentance is not real if 
every evil affection without exception is not given up. What does it 
profit thee to break every other chain, if one remains, binding thee to 
hell? (St. Augustine.) 

True contrition often manifests itself in tears. 

It was so in the case of Magdalen in Simon's house (Luke vii. 38), 
and of St. Peter when he had denied Our Lord (Matt. xxvi. 75). The 
apostle's sorrow was lifelong; it is said that his tears made two fur- 
rows on his cheeks. Penitential tears are not indispensable, but they 
are very efficacious; they render forgiveness more sure. The tears 
of the penitent are the most forcible language he can use ; they com- 
pel God to forgive him. Penitential tears wash away the stains of 
sin ; they are a kind of baptism, only the cleansing waters come from 
within, not from without. They enlighten the mind, as rain clears 
the sky. The more we weep for sin the more clearly we perceive its 
turpitude, and our tears lead to a fundamental amendment of life. 
As medicinal springs heal bodily sickness, so tears cure the maladies 
of the soul. They bring interior consolation; they refresh the soul 
as dew does the plant. The tears of the penitent give joy to the angels 
and drive away the devils; they have much the same effect on them 
as holy water has. 



The Sacraments. 619 

The means of awakening true contrition is to reflect that by 
our sins we have grievously offended the infinite majesty of God, 
and have displeased our loving Father, our greatest Benefactor. 

Contemplate the myriad stars iu the firmament of heaven, con- 
sider the countless number of human beings upon earth, the innumer- 
able hosts of spirits in the realms of space, and thence conclude how 
infinite is the divine greatness. And you have offended this sovereign 
Lord ! Consider furthermore the greatness of your heavenly Father's 
love for you, in that He gave what was dearest to Him, His only-be- 
gotten Son for you. How shameful to offend so loving a father ! Re- 
member also all that the Son of God suffered in your stead. Consider 
too, the innumerable benefits which throughout your life you have 
received from God; health, food, clothing, etc., all these things are 
His gifts, which, when He sees fit. He withdraws from the ungrateful ; 
how instead of showing your thankfulness to God, you have often 
grieved Him, and repaid His benefits with ingratitude. 

The contrition which arises from the love of God is called 
perfect contrition. Perfect contrition reconciles man with God 
immediately, before the Sacrament of Penance be actually re- 
ceived (Council of Trent, 14, 4). 

Let us suppose that a father sends his two boys into a town to 
make some purchases. They loiter and play on the way, and are late 
by several hours. On reaching home, they are frightened; one of 
them begins to cry, because he is afraid he will be whipped for his 
negligence; the other boy cries because he knows he has vexed his 
father. The second boy is an example of perfect contrition, the first 
of imperfect. He only has perfect contrition who is sorry for his 
sin because he has thereby offended God. Of this we find examples in 
David, St. Peter, Magdalen, the publican in the Temple; all these 
transgressors were speedily forgiven. Perfect contrition is, as may 
be gathered from Our Lord's words to Magdalen (Luke vii. 47), as 
a matter of fact, nothing more or less than fervent charity towards 
God, the operation of the Holy Spirit dwelling in man; and he in 
whom the Holy Spirit dwells, possesses sanctifying grace and is free 
from mortal sin. The least degree of perfect contrition suffices in- 
stantly to cancel the debt of sin (St. Thomas Aquinas). And if one 
who is not in mortal sin awakens perfect contrition, the effect is to 
increase sanctifying grace and remit the temporal punishment due to 
sin. Perfect contrition is accompanied by the desire of confession; 
yet it is not necessary to go to confession at once ; it is enough to do 
so when the precept of the Church enjoins this upon one. In fact, 
it is not indispensable to perfect contrition that the desire for con- 
fession should be explicit; it is enough that the penitent should be 
ready to go to confession when the obligation arises. 

We should make an act of perfect contrition from time to 
time in the course of our life, particularly in the hour of death, 
or if our life is in danger. 

If, in travelling by land or sea, we should perceive an accident to 
be imminent, let our first thought be to make an act of perfect con- 



620 The Means of Grace. 

trition, and our reconciliation with God will be complete. It hap- 
pened once that the father of a family broke a blood-vessel. A mes- 
senger was instantly dispatched to summon a priest, but meanwhile 
the youngest child, who had recently made his first communion, per- 
ceiving that his father's life was fast ebbing away, took a crucifix 
from the wall, and holding it before the dying man's eyes, repeated 
aloud an act of perfect contrition. Tears filled the father's eyes ; he 
expired before the priest came, but he was safe for all eternity. It 
is probable that at the time of the Deluge, and the destruction of 
Sodom and Gomorrha, some persons were saved from eternal perdi- 
tion by an act of perfect contrition. If you should have the mis- 
fortune to offend God grievously, make an act of contrition imme- 
diately. Do not go to rest at night, or begin the day's work, or start 
on a journey, without in this manner making your salvation sure. 
It is no difficult matter to awaken true contrition, if one has a good 
will. Under the Old Dispensation it was the only means of obtaining 
remission of sin; and every Christian is bound, under paiji of mortal 
sin, to make an act of perfect contrition in the hour of death, in case 
he is conscious of sin and cannot go to confession again. Only those 
find it hard who neglect all the ordinances of religion; they are like 
a clock which will not go, even when wound up by sanctifying grace, 
because the works are rusty from disuse. A special interposition of 
Providence, or a miracle of grace is needed to enable such persons 
to awaken perfect contrition. Cardinal Franzelin was so impressed 
with the immense value of perfect contrition, that he declared were 
he to go as a preacher from land to land, it should be the principal 
theme of his discourses. 

The consideration that we must expect the just judgments 
of God on account of our sins, also disposes us to true contrition. 

Remember the punishment of the rebel angels, of our first parents, 
of the population of Sodom, of ^oe's contemporaries, etc. Reflect 
upon the awful pains of hell. And even if you do escape hell, there 
is the fire of purgatory to be endured ; there the least punishment far 
exceeds all that one can suffer on earth, even the tortures inflicted 
on the martyrs. ]N"one but great saints have been exempted from 
this chastisement. How then can you expect to elude it? How 
terrible a thing it is to offend God! 

The contrition which arises from fear of God is called attri- 
tion, or imperfect contrition. When the contrition of the peni- 
tent is imperfect, forgiveness of sin is only obtained through 
sacerdotal absolution. 

The contrition of the Ninivites was imperfect, when, smitten with 
fear at the preaching of Jonas, they did penance (Council of Trent, 
14, 4). The penitent who is actuated by fear alone, retains a certain 
attachment to sin, though he may abstain from the outward act. 
Hence his repentance is less efficacious. Imperfect contrition is like a 
tiny spark, which must be fanned by confession and the priest's 
absolution, before it consumes the chaff of sin. 



The Sacraments, 621 

Confession without contrition does not obtain the divine for- 
giveness. 

Whoso goes to confession without sorrow of mind, detestation of 
sins committed, and the purpose of not sinning in future, but merely 
from force of habit and not from consciousness of sin, derives no 
benefit from the act. The husbandman who scatters seed on untilled 
soil, labors in vain; in like manner the words of absolution are in- 
efficacious in regard to one whose heart is unprepared, and who will 
not renounce sin. Confession without contrition is like a gun loaded 
without shot, an ear of corn empty of grain; it is like the barren fig- 
tree Our Lord cursed; for on the tree of penance confession is but 
the leaves, while contrition is the fruit. St. John Chrysostom com- 
pares the man who goes to confession without contrition to an actor 
in a play. From the story of the prodigal we gather that confession 
alone is not everything; the father scarcely heeded what his son 
said, but as soon as he perceived his heart was changed, he hardly 
let him finish speaking, but clasped him in his arms. 

3. We must make a firm resolution, that is, we must stead- 
fastly determine with the help of God to desist from all sin, and 
to avoid the occasions of sin for the future. 

The purpose of amendment is an essential part of true contrition 
(Council of Trent, 14, 4). The resolution to sin no more arises 
out of contrition, as water issues from a spring. So long as the will 
retains its attachment to sin, neither mortal nor venial sin can be 
remitted. All men are not thus resolute, for many do not adhere to 
their resolutions. They act like a woman, who, when her husband 
dies, makes a terrible outcry, extolling loudly the excellent qualities 
of the deceased, and protesting vehemently that she will never marry 
again; but in a very short time, oblivious of her asseverations, she 
gives her hand to another man. Those who in time of illness or of 
adversity form good resolutions, but do not carry them out, are like 
the wolf who retreats to the wood when he hears the dogs bark and 
the shepherds cry out, but remains a wolf none the less. A good 
resolution is like a nail driven fast into a wall; but the resolutions 
of too many resemble a nail badly knocked in, which falls out as 
soon as anything is hung upon it. The way to hell is paved with 
good resolutions, which have not been carried out. All men will 
not determine to renounce every sin. St. Sebastian promised to heal 
the proconsul if he would destroy all the idols in Rome; the pro- 
consul did this, with the exception of a little idol of gold, an heir- 
loom in his family, which he concealed. The saint consequently 
could not cure him, and he told him the reason. Many sinners do 
the same; there is one darling sin which they will not give up, and 
therefore they cannot break away from the devil and become the 
friends of God; for God's sake everything must be renounced. The 
penitent must also seriously avoid all occasions of sin. The man 
who merely dislikes his neighbor, contents himself with eschewing 
his company ; but if he has a thoroughgoing hatred for him, he gets 
nd of everything that can remind him of him; he holds aloof from 
his friends and relatives, he destroys his portrait, the presents he 
has received from him, etc. Thus must the penitent act who has a 



623 The Means of Grace. 

real detestation of sin; lie must avoid all and everything that leads 
to sin, or that reminds him of sin. Those who wish to do better, but 
will not avoid the occasion of sin, are like one who sweeps away the 
cobweb, but does not kill the spider; thus a fresh web is soon spun. 
Or he is like a gardener who cuts off the weeds and does not root them 
up; in a little time they are greener than ever. Too often sinners 
who confess their sins but will not give up the occasion of sin 
transgress more deeply than before. If you would keep the flies from 
your table, you must remove the sweet dishes that attract them; so if 
you would keep free from sin, you must keep far from you the oc- 
casions of sin. Good resolutions are no use without the divine assist- 
ance, any more than the com can fructify without rain and sun- 
shine. Hence we must not trust to our own strength, but in the 
grace of God. 

Our resolution should have reference to one particular sin, 
and that the one to which we are most attached. 

It is impossible to carry out many resolutions at a time. To at- 
tempt this is like endeavoring to roll several large stones up hill all 
at once; we shall succeed with none. It is enough if we set our- 
selves resolutely to overcome one fault, for in doing so we shall 
combat all the others, just as while curbing one restive horse, we check 
the others who are harnessed with it. If we did but root out one 
vice every year, we should soon become perfect men. 

4. We are under the obligation of confessing our sins, that is, 
we must secretly to the priest enumerate all the mortal sins of 
which we are conscious, accurately, simply and humbly; with 
the number of times we have committed them, besides all that 
is necessary to make known the nature of the sin (Council of 
Trent, 14, 5, 7). 

It is not necessary, but it is salutary and profitable to confess 
venial sins. 

If a mortal sin has been forgotten in confession, it must be 
mentioned the next time. 

Confession must be made secretly, that is, we must speak in so 
low a tone that no one near, besides the priest, shall hear what is 
said. Confession must be accurate. We should avoid the use of 
general terms ; for instance, it is not right to say : I have transgressed 
the Third, Fifth or Seventh Commandment; I have not loved God 
with my whole heart; I have sinned in thought, word and deed. 
Such phrases are unmeaning. Yet, while entering into particulars, 
everything should be told as briefly as possible, every superfluous de- 
tail being avoided. Any one who has been accessory to our sin is 
not to be mentioned by name. Simple : Ambiguous expressions, at- 
tempts at self -justification, cannot be allowed in confession ; the peni- 
tent must be simple and caijdid, as a crystal is clear and transparent. 
To seek to justify one's self is to act like our first parents in para- 
dise, who shifted the blame from their own shoulders, and were pun- 
ished more severely for it. "Accuse thyself, and God will excuse 



The Sacraments, 

thee; excuse thyself and God will accuse thee" (St. Augustine). 
Humble: The penitent must not take offence if the confessor re- 
proves or questions him. In the confessional the priest is in the 
place of God, the penitent is but a miserable sinner. King Louis IX. 
once said to a priest, who timidly addressed him as " Your Majesty " ; 
" I am not a king here, nor are you a subject; I am a child, and you 
are a father." The Empress Constantia once sent for the Abbot 
Joachim, and wanted him to hear her confession while she remained 
seated on her throne. But the abbot said : " If thou art to be in the 
place of Magdalen, and I in that of Christ, thou must leave thy 
throne and kneel at my feet; otherwise I will go away at once." If 
the priest perceives that the confession is not entire and complete, 
he asks questions; just as the customs officer, if he thinks that a 
traveller has articles on which duty has to be paid, does not satisfy 
himself with yes or no, but searches his luggage. If the penitent is 
unable to speak, for instance, if he is deaf and dumb, or extremely ill, 
he must make his confession by signs, or the deaf-mute may make it 
in writing. Absolution can never be given to any one at a distance, 
though it is besought by letter or by a messenger. It is enough if 
all mortal sins are confessed. For if the beams are burned away, 
the planks will probably be consumed 'with them, but the reverse is 
not the case. Unfortunately, people are too apt to confess venial 
and conceal mortal sins. Yet it is profitable to confess venial sins, 
for thereby a portion of the temporal penalty is cancelled, and greater 
peace of mind is acquired, since in regard to some sins we cannot 
decide with certainty whether they are mortal or venial. Those who 
cannot accuse themselves of any mortal sin, must at least confess 
some venial sins, or a sin of their past life, otherwise they cannot 
receive absolution. All mortal sins must be declared, unless under 
exceptional circumstances, such as the penitent being at the point of 
death, in imminent danger (on a sinking ship), too ill to speak more 
than a few words, or in a hospital where his confession may be over- 
heard. In such cases an incomplete confession is permissible. All 
the mortal sins of which we are conscious must, as has been said, 
be enumerated in confession ; yet it may occur that one is forgotten ; 
if so, it must be mentioned next time, and we need not distress our- 
selves if we do not remember it until after communion, for our 
confession was not sacrilegious. We must also declare as nearly 
as possible how often any mortal sin has been committed. 

5. Satisfaction must be made: i.e., we must perform the pen- 
ance enjoined upon us by the confessor. 

The debt of temporal punishment is in no wise remitted by the 
Sacrament of Penance. For God is not more merciful than He is 
just ; therefore works of penance are imposed on the penitent, whereby 
he may discharge the debt of temporal punishment due to his sins. 
Works of penance are not only for the punishing or avenging of past 
sins, they are also a medicine. The sinner is like a wounded warrior ; 
it is not enough to extract the bullet from the wound ; bandages and 
balsam must be applied to heal it. The priest does not merely deliver 
the penitent from the guilt of sin, he enjoins on him suitable and 
salutary satisfaction, which shall act as a remedy against relapse. 
As a rule, he imposes on him penances exactly opposed to his evil 



624 The Means of Grace. 

propensities; almsdeeds on the avaricious, fasting on the intem- 
perate, and so forth. Nothing is more efficacious in eradicating sin 
than prayer, ahnsgiving, and fasting, because the concupiscence of 
the eyes, the concupiscence of the flesh, and the pride of life, are 
overcome by the practice of the opposite virtues. 

The confessor generally enjoins upon the penitent, prayer, alms- 
deeds, and fasting, as works of penance, in order that he may 
thereby discharge the temporal penalties, and weaken the power 
of evil tendencies (Council of Trent, 14, 8). 

In former times most rigorous penances were imposed; e.g., fast- 
ing on bread and water, abstinence from meat and wine, the non- 
reception of holy communion, and the like. These penances were not 
for a few days, they lasted months and even years, nay, many were 
lifelong. Some penitents withdrew to the desert to live a life of 
penance, as did St. Mary of Egypt. Nor were these penances only 
imposed for grievous sins, but for comparatively slight transgressions, 
such as the omission of Mass, neglect of the rule of fasting, misbe- 
havior in church, etc. Nowadays the penances imposed are very dif- 
ferent; they bear no possible proportion to the punishment we have 
merited. It is well therefore to undertake some voluntary penances, 
that we may not suffer in purgatory hereafter, as will be shown pres- 
ently. 

The confessor also directs reparation to be made for any 
injury that has been done, and the suppression of all that may 
cause scandal. 

He obliges those who have stolen other people's goods to make 
restitution; those who have wronged others by slander to retract 
their words and make an apology. He deals gently with the penitent, 
and does not require from him what he cannot or will not perform. 

^ The works of penance imposed by the confessor ought to be 
conscientiously performed in union with the satisfaction of Our 
Lord Jesus Christ. 

By the performance of our sacramental penance (that enjoined 
by the priest), we discharge more of our debt than by works volun- 
tarily undertaken. The former have the virtue of obedience; they 
would lose their value if they were knowingly altered, therefore they 
must be done with scrupulous exactitude. If they cannot be per- 
formed, this must be told to the priest in the next confession. They 
must also be performed without delay, for they have no efficacy in 
remitting sin or earning grace unless the penitent is in a state of 
grace, and this is most certain immediately after confession. Still 
there is no obligation to say one's penance before approaching holy 
communion, but we must not put off saying it until there is a danger 
of our forgetting it. Whoso neglects to perform his sacramental pen- 
ance loses many graces, and violates the obedience he owes to the 
priest as God's representative; but he does not thereby render his 
confession invalid. He is like a sick man who, when the physician 
has gene, will not take the medicine he prescribed. He shows more- 



The Sacraments, 625 

over, that he does not think seriously of amending his life. All our 
works of penance are of themselves without merit ; they derive their 
sufficiency from the merit of the satisfaction made by Christ. For 
this reason the Church concludes all her petitions with the words: 
Per Dominum nostrum Jesum Christum. Our works cannot, never- 
theless, be dispensed with, for Christ has only merited for us what 
was beyond our reach ; He has opened heaven to us again, it behooves 
us through the satisfaction we make to appropriate to ourselves what 
He merited for us. We know that only if we suffer with Him shall 
we also be glorified with Him (Rom. viii. 17). 

We should, besides, make satisfaction by punishments volun- 
tarily undertaken of ourselves ; and also by bearing patiently the 
temporal scourges inflicted of God (Council of Trent, 14, 9). 

We ought to perform volimtary penances as well as those enjoined 
on us. The man who owes a thousand dollars does not deem himself 
out of debt when he has paid three or four hundred; he cannot rest 
until the whole debt is paid off. So we must labor continually to dis- 
charge our debt. Divine justice can only be satisfied by long and 
continuous penance. " Chastise thyself," says St. Augustine, " if thou 
wouldst not have God chastise thee." By a little labor here we can 
avert great pains hereafter. The whole life of the Christian ought 
to be a perpetual penance (Council of Trent, 14, 9). "Attach no 
credit," says St. John of the Cross, " to the man who decries penance, 
although he may have the gift of miracles." While we do penance, 
we may count upon the assistance of grace. Patience under suffering 
is an effectual means of making satisfaction; the merit of suffering 
does not consist in the amount we bear, but the manner in which we 
bear it. Comparatively slight afflictions borne patiently will have 
far more value as expiation for sin than much greater works under- 
taken of our own free will. Happy those to whom it is given to expiate 
their sins on earth, for the fires of purgatory are infinitely worse than 
anything we suffer here, and they do not contribute to our future 
felicity; they are simply punitive, not meritorious. Another most 
profitable means of making satisfaction is the willing acceptance of 
death at the hand of God. Since Christ died for us, death is not now 
regarded so much in the light of a chastisement, and by nothing can 
we merit so greatly as by accepting it willingly. 

The works of penance which we perform and the sufferings 
we bear patiently do not only cancel the temporal punishment 
due to our sins, but they contribute to the increase of our eternal 
happiness. 

The satisfaction we make here obtains not only pardon from God, 
but also a reward. All suffering is the penalty of sin, but by God's 
mercy it is also a ladder whereby we may ascend to heaven. How 
vast is the mercy and loving kindness of God ! 

General Confession, 

1. By a general confession is meant the confession of all thr 
siTis we have committed Avithin a considerable period of tinie* 



626 TJie Means of Grace. 

Dwelling-houses are swept and cleaned every week, but at longer 
intervals a thorough cleansing is necessary; the ceilings are white- 
washed, the floors are scrubbed. It is the same with our soul; we 
cleanse it frequently during our lives by confession, but occasionally 
we purify it more fully by a general confession. 

2. A general confession is profitable because it produces in 
us greater self-knowledge, deeper humility, increased tranquil- 
lity of conscience, and obtains many graces from God. 

It produces greater self-knowledge, because it brings many hidden 
sins to light. If we fish with a rod or a net, not many fishes are 
caught, for they shelter themselves under the banks; but if all the 
water is drawn ofi the pond, all the fish come to sight. The difference 
between ordinary confession and a general confession is much the 
same. It also deepens humility. A small troop of soldiers attacking 
the enemy has not the same force as the whole army; so the sins we 
confess from time to time have not the same power to humble our 
pride as the whole array when disclosed by a general confession. It 
increases tranquillity of conscience. When a steward has to make up 
his accounts to his master, he is afraid lest some error should be de- 
tected; but when they are all looked over and found correct, his 
mind is at rest. So it is with confession. It also obtains great graces 
from God. Just as a beggar excites more commiseration if he tells 
the full tale of his woes, so man appeals more strongly to the com- 
passion of God, and obtains more graces from Him, if he humbles 
himseK by the acknowledgment of all his misery and frailty. With 
many persons a general confession has inaugurated a new life. 
Hence we may conclude that it is a means of obtaining a large meas- 
ure of grace. 

3. A general confession is indispensable, if an invalid con- 
fession has once been made; it is also advisable in the case of 
persons who are entering upon a new state of life, or who are in 
danger of death. 

What has already been said upon concealment of sins in confession 
need ndt be repeated here. People about to be married, or clerics on 
the eve of ordination, ought to make a general confession. What 
consolation for the dying to know that the affairs of their soul are 
all well-ordered! Scrupulous persons should be forbidden to make 
a general confession; for them the practice of obedience is more 
salutary. 

Confession a Divine Institution. 

1. Confession of sins was instituted by Our Lord, and has been 
the practice of the Church in all centuries. 

Confession was practised under the Old Dispensation, not indeed 
as a sacrament, but as foreshadowing the sacrajnent. The first 
confession was made in paradise; God was the Confessor, Adam and 
Eve were the penitents. God called upon Cain to make a confession ; 



The Sacraments, 627 

he refused to do so and was cursed in qonsequence. David confessed 
his sin and was forgiven. Under the law of Moses a certain form of 
confession was customary among the Jews (Numb, v.-vii.). The people 
who came to John the Baptist to be baptized confessed their sins 
(Mark i. 5). Christ, Who did not come to destroy the law, but to 
fulfil it (Matt. V. 17), confirmed and perfected the existing practice 
of confession, and attached many graces to it. 

1. On the day of His resurrection Our Lord gave to the 
apostles and their successors the power to forgive and to retain 
sins. It is obvious that in order that this power may be exer- 
cised aright, it is necessary for the sinner to reveal the state 
of his soul. 

The words of Our Lord are these : " Whose sins you shall forgive, 
they are forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are 
retained " (John xx. 23). 

2. Even in "the apostles' time the Christian converts came to 
them, " confessing and declaring their deeds.'' 

Thus they came to St. Paul in Ephesus (Acts xix. 18). St. John 
also states that by confession of sin pardon may be obtained (1 
John i. 9). 

3. In the writings of the Fathers and Doctors of the Church 
in the first centuries Christians are frequently exhorted to con- 
fess their sins, many appropriate and beautiful similes being 
made use of in illustration. 

Tertullian, St. Basil, St. Gregory the Great and others compare 
the sinner to a sick man, who, if he would be cured, must declare 
his symptoms or exhibit his festering sore to a skilful and experi- 
enced physician. So the sinner must apply to the dispenser of the 
divine mysteries and confess his sins that he may obtain remission. 
St. Augustine says : " It is not enough that a man acknowledge his 
sins to God, from Whom nothing is hidden; he must also confess 
them to the priest, God's representative." Pope Leo I. censured the 
custom of public confession as too rigorous, asserting that secret con- 
fession was quite sufficient. It is noteworthy how often the Fathers 
warn Christians against concealing a sin in confession. Even Prot- 
estants cannot contest the fact that confession was practised both 
in the first centuries of Christianity and in the Middle Ages; in 
regard to the latter, history affords abundant evidence, for the very 
names of the confessors of distinguished Christian rulers are recorded. 

4. Confession was also retained by the earlier heretical sects 
which fell away from the Church. 

This fact affords unquestionable proof of the antiquity of con- 
fession. But we find the practice in a perverted form among sec- 
•taries ; for instance, it is said that in the Russian Church the priest 
is bound to inform against any one who confesses crimes of a Nihil- 
istic character. What a contrast to the rules of the Catholic Church I 



628 The Means of Grace 

6. It is impossible to prove confession to be of human insti- 
tution. 

The name of the inventor or originator is generally attached to 
every human institution or discovery. But those who deny the di- 
vine origin of confession, cannot say in what land and at what epoch 
this custom — than which none other is so difficult and wearisome, and 
at the same time so unremunerative for the priest — was first intro- 
duced. Protestants do, it is true, allege that it was introduced at 
the Lateran Council in 1215, when confession once a year was made 
obligatory for the faithful; but who would be so foolish as to con- 
clude, because a father bade his son pay him a visit regularly once 
every year, that until then he had not been in the habit of ever vis- 
iting him? 

2. The institution of confession affords us proof of the infinite 
mercy and wisdom ef God. 

How easy it is for us, who on account of our sins are like crim- 
nals condemned to death, to obtain pardon from God! He does 
not require of us severe sufferings, a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, or 
the like ; nothing but the confession of our sins to any one of His min- 
isters whom we may select, and who is pledged to strictest secrecy. 
]^o earthly monarch was ever so indulgent to transgressors. What 
exertions a prisoner confined in a subterranean dungeon will make to 
regain his liberty! For a whole year he will work at filing through 
a bar or loosening a stone. The spiritual prisoner need take no such 
pains to recover his freedom; such is the unfathomable bounty and 
mercy of God. The infinite wisdom of God is also exhibited in the 
institution of confession. The skill of an experienced physician 
is shown by the fact that he not only relieves the patient, but by 
the employment of a remedy opposed to the disease, eliminates its 
cause. Now we know that all transgressions come from pride; it is, 
as St. Thomas Aquinas declares, the source of all sin; confession is 
diametrically opposed to pride, it is a humiliation for the sinner. 
Thus God manifests His wisdom by appointing a practice easy and 
simple in itself, and yet most painful to human natiu-e ; for confession 
requires no slight conquest of self. 



The Advantages of Confession, 

Confession is extremely useful both to individuals and to so- 
ciety in general. 

1. Confession is profitable to the individual inasmuch as he 
derives from it self-knowledge, delicacy of conscience, interior 
peace, strength of character, and moral purity. 

By comparing all that he has done or left undone with the law 
of God's commandments, the penitent learns to know his own heart. 
His conscience also speaks more clearly. By frequent confession 
the law of God is more deeply impressed on the heart of man ; when 
tempted to sin, the commandment he is about to breal<^ presents 



The Sacrameiits, 

itself to his mind. The mere thought of confession also acts as a de- 
terrent from sin; some persons abstain from sin because they could 
not bear to tell it to the priest. Experience proves how great a relief 
confession is to the mind of one who has committed a grievous sin. 
The impulse to confess one's misdeeds is inherent in human nature; 
confession answers to this feeling, and the assurance of pardon af- 
fords the greatest consolation. Confession also increases strength of 
character, for by it we learn to overcome ourselves. Moreover the 
Holy Spirit enlightens our understanding and fortifies our will, and 
the more steadfastly the will is inclined to what is good, the more 
strength of character we shall possess. Confession, being in itself 
an act of humility, cannot fail to make a man humble, and humility 
is the foundation of all moral perfection. Proud people have the 
greatest aversion to confession. It is a means of freeing ourselves 
from the fetters of the devil, for by telling the truth when it would 
be so easy to deceive, and the temptation to conceal is often experi- 
enced, we throw off the yoke of the father of lies, and turn to Him 
Who is eternal Truth. And the less power the devil has over a man, 
the more easily he will draw nigh to God. The first step in amend- 
ment of life is to go to confession. " Before applying thyself to good 
deeds," says St. Augustine, " confess thy misdeeds." 

2. Confession is profitable to society at large because it is 
a means whereby disputes are settled, stolen property is re- 
stored, crimes are prevented, and vice effectually suppressed. 

Absolution is not given to the penitent who refuses to forgive his 
neighbor or make restitution of property wrongfully obtained. The 
reason why non-Catholics often prefer Catholic servants and are 
willing to let them go to confession is apparent. The priest in the 
confessional spares no pains to dissuade those who come to him from 
carrying out any evil designs they may have formed, and tells them 
what measures they must take to master their passions. More is 
done in the confessional than in the pulpit for the furtherance of 
morality, for what is said in private has more effect that what is 
said in public. Pope Pius V. used to say : " Give me good confessors 
and I will reform the whole world." If the discovery were made that 
confession was practised by one of the pagan nations of antiquity, too 
much could not be said in praise of so excellent and wise an institu- 
tion; but because it is practised in the Catholic Church, and ap- 
pointed by the living God, it is termed foolish, tyrannical, and de- 
grading. 

The Sin of Relapse. 

When the Ark of the Covenant, we are told, was carried to the 
brink of the Jordan, the water left off flowing downwards, and stood 
together in a heap. But no sooner had the ark passed over, than the 
waters returned into their channel and ran on as they were wont 
before (Josue iii.). So it is with many a Christian. When they 
have received the sacraments, they restrain their passions a little; 
but before long they again give them free rein, and sin even more 
deeply than ever. "Many," says St. Jerome, "begin well, but few 



^30 The Means of Grace. 

persevere." '^^ They put their hand to the plough and then look 
back" (Luke ix. 62). They are to be compared to the sow that was 
washed and returns to her wallowing in the mire (2 Pet. ii. 22), or 
to the dog that returneth to his vomit (Prov. xxvi. 11). 

1. He who after his conversion relapses into mortal sin, is in 
danger of dying impenitent, because the devil acquires great power 
over him, and the influence of the Holy Spirit is lessened. 

It is impossible for those who were once illuminated, and were 
made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and are fallen away, to be re- 
newed again to penance (Heb. vi. 4). The backslider finds it difficult 
to regain the right road. Pelapse into sin is like the relapse of a 
convalescent; the disease from which he suffered has more hold on 
him than before. Our Lord says of such a one that the unclean spirit 
returns to him and takes with him seven other spirits more wicked 
than himself (Luke xi. 26). The devil deals with the backslider as 
a prudent warder does with a prisoner who has once escaped; he 
guards him more watchfully than before. The backslider grieves the 
Holy Spirit of God (Eph. iv. 30) ; nay he drives Him away, and vio- 
lates the temple of God (1 Cor. iii. 17). Thus the sin of relapse 
renders a man unworthy of the assistance of divine grace. He 
does not deserve to be cured who opens his wounds afresh. A prince 
will not readily readmit a man to his favor, who despite all protesta- 
tions of fidelity has proved himself a traitor. The sin of relapse 
is severely punished by God. Our Lord said to the man whom He 
had healed : " Sin no more, lest some worse thing happen to thee " 
(Johnv. 14). 

2. If any one should relapse into mortal sin, let him forthwith 
repent and go to confession; for the longer penance is delayed, 
the more difficult, the more uncertain conversion will be. 

The backslider ought to act as St. Peter did when he had denietx 
Christ; he went out and wept bitterly (Matt. xxvi. 75). If fire 
breaks out in a house, it can be extinguished at once if help is at 
hand; and if the backslider does penance immediately, his sin may 
be pardoned; nay more, his fall may even obtain for him a greater 
measure of grace. In the case of some saints, their fall produced in 
them a greater accession of fervor, and the depth of their contrition 
obtained for them a higher degree of grace. But the longer penance 
is postponed, the worse it will fare with the sinner. It is the opinion 
of the Fathers that as almighty God has appointed beforehand the 
number of talents to be confided to every individual, so He has fixed 
the number of sins which shall be forgiven to each; when this num- 
ber is complete, there is no more pardon to be found. St. Augustine 
says that the long-suffering of God bears with the sinner up to a cer- 
tain point; after that he cannot obtain forgiveness. In his first ill- 
ness the infidel Voltaire repented; but he presently fell into greater 
wickedness than before, and his end was a dreadful one. 

3. If, through frailty, we fall into venial sin, we must not be 
disquieted on that account, but humble ourselves before God. 

To be vexed and out of temper with one's self shows pride ; we can- 
not tolerate the sight of our own imperfections. It is of no use to 



TJie Sazraments. 631 

be angry because we are men, not angels; in that way we only per- 
petuate our faults. "If," as St. Francis of Sales says, "we are 
angry with ourselves for being angry with another, we feed our 
anger instead of stifling it." No one is able throughout his whole 
life to avoid all sins, except by a special privilege from God, as the 
Church holds in regard of the Blessed Virgin (Council of Trent, 6, 
1^3). God permits us to fall into venial sins to keep us humble. He 
does like the mother who lets her child run alone in a soft meadow, 
where a fall will do him no harm; but on a rough road she carries 
him in her arms. So God upholds us in great dangers by His al- 
mighty hand, but in slight matters He leaves us more to ourselves. 
Hence we must act like children, when they fall; they cry a little 
and get up again; so we must at once bewail our fault, acknowledge 
our misery, renew our trust in God, and go on as before. Thus our 
sins may be made of profit to us ; they ought to humble, not to dis- 
courage us (St. Francis of Sales). It is impossible to keep the linen 
we wear perfectly clean, but we can have it washed when it is soiled. 
It is equally impossible to keep our soul free from all stains, yet 
it is in our power to cleanse it when we have fallen into sin. The 
just man falls seven times, but he shall rise again seven times (Prov. 
xxiv. 16). 

4. Since we cannot possibly continue in a state of grace until 
death without the special assistance of the Holy Spirit, let us 
fervently implore of God the grace of final perseverance. 

In addition to sanctifying grace the just man needs actual grace, 
in order to persevere in justice. As the most healthy eye cannot see 
without the light of the sun, so the best of men cannot live aright 
without the operation of grace. The justified are not able to per- 
severe in justice received without the special help of God (Council 
of Trent, 6, 22). Without the assistance of grace we should quickly 
relapse into our former sins, and into yet worse ones, just as crea- 
tion would fall back into nothing if not preserved in existence by 
God. The gift of final perseverance is the greatest gift we can re- 
ceive from God, for all other graces are valueless without it. "He 
that shall persevere unto the end, he," and he only, " shall be saved " 
(Matt. xxiv. 13). It is useless to lay the foundation of a house if 
the structure is not to be finished. " The Christian," says St. 
Augustine, " will not be questioned about the commencement, but the 
end of his life." St. Paul made a bad beginning, but a good end. 
Judas began well, and ended by betraying Our Lord, to his own 
damnation. The gift of final perseverance will not be denied to him 
who humbly implores it. 

By erood w^orks also we may make sure our calling and elec- 
tion (2 Pet. i. 10). Unremitting prayer, and heartfelt devotion 
to the Mother of God are besides excellent means to enable ua 
to persevere in justice. 

The more good work we have done the less need we fear damna- 
tion. Hence the prophet said to Josaphat, the King of Israel : " Thou 
didst deserve indeed the wrath of God^ but good works are found in 



632 The Meani> r/ Grace. 

thee" (2 Par. xix. 3). Why were David and St. Peter treated hy 
God with such favor and indulgence after their fall? Because of 
the good works they had previously performed. Unremitting prayer 
is also an excellent means of persevering in justice. As birds con- 
tinually move their wings in the air, to keep from falling to the 
ground, so we should soar to God on the pinions of prayer, lest we 
fall into mortal sin. Our Lord enjoins on us "always to pray" 
(Luke xviii. 1). There is nothing more certain to preserve us through- 
out our life in the grace of God than unceasing prayer. Hot water 
does not get cold if it be placed close to the fire, neither does the 
warmth of divine charity die out of our heart if we keep it near to 
God by frequent ejaculatory prayers. And since all graces come to us 
through the hands of the Mother of God, we cannot doubt that the 
gift of final perseverance, the greatest of all graces, will only be ob- 
tained through her intercession on our behalf. "If thou dost enjoy 
Mary's favor," St. Bernard declares, " thou art sure of salvation." 



mDVLGENCES, 

It has already been explained that by the Sacrament of Penance 
the debt of eternal punishment due to the sinner is remitted, but 
not the temporal. This he must discharge either in this world by 
sickness, adversity, temptation, persecution, voluntary works of pen- 
ance, and the like, or in the fires of purgatory after death. This is 
exemplified by the holy penitent, Mary of Egypt. For seventeen 
years she led a sinful life; after her conversion she did penance in 
the desert for seventeen years. Her penance consisted in horrible 
temptations, in hunger and thirst, in sufferings from exposure to cold 
and heat. It was the same with other penitents. 

1. God has granted to the Church the power, after the recon- 
ciliation of the sinner with God, of changing the punishments 
yet remaining due to sin into works of penance, or of remitting 
them altogether. 

Our Lord conferred on St. Peter in particular, and on all the 
apostles in general, the power to remove whatever hindered the ad- 
mission of the penitent to heaven. To St. Peter He said : " Whatso- 
ever thou shalt loose on earth, it shall be loosed in heaven" (Matt, 
xvi. 19), and to the apostles He said: "Whatsoever you shall loose 
on earth shall be loosed also in heaven " (Matt, xviii. 18). IN'ow since 
mortal sin excludes from heaven permanently, and the temporal pen- 
alty of sin temporarily, power to remit both one and the other is 
vested in the Head of the Church and in the bishops. We read that 
certain Christians of Corinth, who had been excommunicated for 
their vices, were pardoned by St. Paul in the name of Christ (2 Cor. 
ii. 10), after they had testified to the sincerity of their compunction. 
When the Church remits temporal penalties, she does not cancef them 
altogether; she supplies what is lacking from the treasury of the 
infinite merits of Christ and of the saints. Many members of the 
Church have performed penances over and above what was due to 
their sins, and the store of their merits, owing to the satisfactioD 



The Sacraments, 

made by Christ, is so vast in extent, that it far exceeds the penalties 
due to the sins of all living (St. Thomas Aquinas). In these merits 
all participate who belong to the communion of saints; and the dis- 
tribution of them was entrusted by the Son of God to St. Peter, who 
is the doorkeeper of heaven. Thus it will be seen that no one is act- 
ually exempted from the payment of his debt, since what is still due 
is paid out of the treasury of the Church. 

1. Hence at the time of the great persecutions, the Church 
used to lay upon repentant sinners public penances for the ex- 
piation of the temporal punishment of sin, and afterwards com- 
mute them into lesser ones, or remit them altogether, if the peni- 
tent manifested a sincere intention of amendment, or a martyr 
interceded for him. 

The Christians of early ages were mostly recent converts from 
heathenism, and needed rigorous treatment. Public penance gener- 
ally consisted in exclusion from the company of the faithful; the 
excommunicate were only allowed to kneel in the vestibule of the 
Church and hear the first portion of the Mass; they were not per- 
mitted to receive holy communion, and as a rule, were not absolved 
until the expiration of their term of penance. During that time on 
fixed days they had to fast on bread and water. This public penance 
usually lasted seven years; it was only imposed for grave offences, 
such as apostasy, giving the Holy Scriptures into the hands of pagans, 
etc. ; for heinous crimes such as murder, the period was still longer. 
For lesser transgressions a fast of forty days was the ordinary pen- 
ance. But the Church knew that the design of God is not so much 
to chastise the sinner as to detach him from earthly affections and 
lead him to amend; thus, if the penitent showed by his conduct that 
his conversion was not superficial, but real, it was deemed unneces- 
sary for him to do further penance. Consequently the penitential 
works were in some cases partially or wholly remitted. ISTow since 
Christians form one body among themselves, the communion of 
saints, they can make satisfaction for one another ; hence the martyrs 
pleaded on behalf of the penitents. St. Thomas Aquinas says that 
what friends do for us we do in a measure for ourselves, since by 
reciprocity of affection two are made one. 

2. In later times, when public penances were abrogated, the 
Church permitted the contrite sinner to discharge the debt of 
temporal punishment due to sin by means of almsdeeds, crusades, 
or pilgrimages. 

Formerly the penitent had to apply for dispensation or mitiga- 
tion; later on it was offered by the Church to the faithful. In the 
Middle Ages there were good reasons for remitting penances on the 
payment of a sum of money, for in those days greed and avarice pre- 
vailed, and we know that every vice is best extirpated by its opposite 
virtue. The money thus collected was expended in the erection of 
churches and cathedrals for the most part ; this is how the funds were 
raised to build St. Peter's at Eome. At the Council of Clermont in 



634 The Means of Grace. 

1095, a total dispensation from works of penance, i.e., a plenary in- 
dulgence, was granted to all who took part in the crusades themselves, 
or in later years provided men or money to carry them on. These 
indulgences were extended to the near relatives of the crusaders. 
Crusades were also undertaken on the same conditions against here- 
tics and the adversaries of the Church. In the tenth century we find 
pilgrimages to Jerusalem, Rome and Compostella mentioned as means 
of discharging the temporal debt due to sin. When the Holy Land 
came into the power of the Turks, and pilgrimages could no longer 
be made to Jerusalem, Pope Boniface VIII. granted full remission 
of temporal punishment to all who, during the year 1300, should for 
fifteen successive days visit the basilica of the apostles in Rome. 
This was the origin of the Jubilee indulgence; it was repeated fifty 
years later, the condition of a visit to the Lateran Church being 
added. In that year three million pilgrims are said to have journeyed 
to the Eternal City. The interval between the granting of these 
indulgences was reduced by later Pontiffs to thirty-three years, in 
honor of the period of Our Lord's life on earth; again it was short- 
ened to twenty-five years. Furthermore it was decreed that the same 
indulgence might be gained by the inhabitants of certain large cities, 
provided they visited their cathedral church and gave a sum equal 
to the cost of a journey to Rome, to the preachers of the indulgence, 
or collectors of ahns. This gave rise to great abuses. The collectors 
who were principally Dominican or Franciscan monks, were some- 
times guilty of extravagances, and the Council of Trent had to sup- 
press their office altogether (Council of Trent, 21, 9). 

3. In more recent times the Church permitted the substitu- 
tion of works more easy of accomplishment, such as prayer and 
the reception of the sacraments, for the more rigorous works of 
penance, as a means of satisfaction. 

In this manner the Church endeavors to incite her children to 
greater fervor; to induce them to approach the sacraments (this 
supposes conversion and amendment), to be diligent in prayer, to 
enrol themselves in confraternities, to recite the Rosary, to increase 
in devotion to saints and relics, etc. She acts like a mother who 
mingles sweets with the bitter physic, to induce the child to swallow 
it. The ancient rule of discipline formerly in force in the Church, 
is the standard whereby the measure of punishment to be remitted 
is estimated; thus when it is said that three years' indulgence is 
granted for the recital of a certain prayer, the meaning is that the 
penitent by repeating that prayer, does as much in expiation of his 
sins as would formerly have been done by three years of canonical 
penance. The object of this is both to testify to the Church's rever- 
ence for ancient ordinances, and also by reminding them of the severe 
requirements of former days, to make the faithful perform cheer- 
fully the easy task they are now called upon to accomplish. 

2. The remission of the temporal punishment due to us on 
acconnt of our sins is called an indulgence, and is obtained by the 
performance, while in a state of grace, of certain good works en- 
joined on US by the Church. 



The Sacraments. 635 

An indulgence (pardon or remission) is therefore a kind of ab- 
solution from the temporal penalty of sin, after absolution from the 
guilt and eternal punishment. An indulgence is very similar to an 
amnesty; if this is granted by a monarch, a free pardon, or mitiga- 
tion of sentence, is accorded, on account of their good conduct, to 
some criminals among others, who, though condemned to death, have 
had their verdict commuted to a term of incarceration. An indul- 
gence is by no means a remission of mortal sin and the eternal pun- 
ishment due to it; these must already be remitted before an indul- 
gence can be gained. It is not absolution from sin, but the remission, 
partial or plenary, of satisfaction due to sin. It is not a means of 
evading the Sacrament of Penance and rendering sin easy; on the 
contrary it obliges us to a real conversion of life. 

Indulgences only remove those temporal sufferings which 
do not conduce to our eternal salvation. 

An indulgence only exempts us from such sufferings as are ex- 
clusively primitive; it does not remove those which God sends upon 
us for our advancement in holiness, or to prevent our relapse into 
sin; for suffering such as these no satisfaction can be made, as we 
see in the case of David. When the death of his child was foretold 
to him, as the punishment of his sin, he besought the Lord for the 
child and kept a fast (2 Kings xii.), but God would not accept this 
satisfaction; the child died. Nor do indulgences deliver us from 
sufferings which are a probation, or are intended to enhance our 
eternal felicity; in that case they would be prejudicial to salvation, 
not beneficial. Without suffering no man can be saved; even the 
immaculate Mother of God, who was free from all sin, had no small 
measure of suffering as her lot on earth. 

jLt is necessary for gaining an indulgence to be in a state of 
grace; otherwise good works can only conduce to the conversion 
of him who performs them, and are valueless for the remission 
of temporal punishment. 

As a member of the human body, if it be dead, can derive no 
benefit from the action of the other living members, so the living 
members of the Church are powerless to aid, by the application of the 
satisfaction they have made, the soul of one who is spiritually dead, 
i.e., in mortal sin. 

The Church grants indulgences for the recital of certain 
prayers, for visiting certain holy places, for the use of certain 
sacred things, besides personal indulgences. 

The heavenly treasures of the Church are not administered for 
gain, but godliness (Council of Trent, 21, 8). As instances of indul- 
genced prayers we may mention the acts of the three theological 
virtues, the Angelus, the usual prayers of Mass, etc. These prayers 
must be vocal ; it is not necessary to repeat them kneeling, unless this 
should be definitely specified. They may be recited in any language, 
provided the translation is approved by the bishop. Not a single word 



636 The Means of Grace. 

must be omitted or altered, and the prescription as to time, place, etc., 
must be strictly observed; but the indulgence is not lost on account 
of some trifling mistake. The indulgence attached to some prayers 
may be gained each time they are repeated (toties quoties); in the 
case of others, only once a day. As instances of places where indul- 
gences may be gained, we may mention the Via Crucis in Jerusalem, 
and the stations wherever they are canonically erected. The Scala 
Santa in Rome, the stairway, that is, in Pilate's house up and down 
which Our Lord was dragged. It consists of twenty-eight marble 
steps, and was brought from Jerusalem to Rome by the Empress 
Helena in 326. By ascending this staircase on one's knees, meditat- 
ing meanwhile on Our Lord's Passion, an indulgence of nine years 
for every step may be gained. Large indulgences are also granted 
for visiting the tomb of the holy apostles, the stations in Rome 
(churches where remarkable relics are preserved), the Chapel of the 
Poi-tiuncula at Assisi, the sepulchre of St. James at Compostella^ 
besides many others. As instances of holy things and sacred objects 
to which indulgences may be attached, we may mention: Crucifixes, 
medals, rosaries, pictures, statues, etc., provided they are not made of 
very fragile material. These objects must be blessed by the Sovereign 
Pontiif, or some priest possessing the powers. The indulgence is 
lost if the object to which it is attached is more than half destroyed; 
if, that is to say, the greater part of the beads of a rosary are worn 
away, or more than half of the crosses have fallen from a set of 
stations, also if a blest object is sold, or lent to another person for the 
sake of gaining the indulgence, but not if it is given away after being 
blessed. More than one indulgence may be attached to the same 
rosary; a crucifix can likewise be indulgenced for the hour of death, 
and for the stations; but one and the same prayer will not avail to 
gain all the indulgences attached to any one object. Partial indul- 
gences may be gained daily ; and plenary very frequently if the usual 
conditions are fulfilled. . All crosses or rosaries brought from Pales- 
tine, which have touched the holy places, have the Papal blessing at- 
tached to them. The members of confraternities and some secular 
priests have personal indulgences granted to them. 

3. An indulgence is either plenary, when a full and entire re- 
mission of all the temporal punishment due to sin is gained, or 
partial, when only a portion of the temporal punishment is re- 
mitted. 

Indulgences are ordinarily greater or less in proportion to the 
prescribed works; for a small work, a small indulgence, for a work 
of difficulty a large indulgence is granted. Let no one imagine that 
it is an easy thing to gain a plenary indulgence. For he who retains 
any undue attachment to earthly things, is not altogether free from 
the guilt of sin; nor consequently from the penalty of sin, and he 
yet needs purification by suffering. Only in as far as the offence 
against God is hateful to the penitent, does God remit the chastise- 
ment due to His justice. 

Plenary indulgences are granted by the Church, provided 
that we approach the sacraments and pray for the Holy Father's 



The Sacraments. 637 

intention besides performing the prescribed works; sometimes 
the condition of visiting a church is added. 

For instance: For daily acts of the three theological virtues, a 
plenary indulgence may be gained on any one day in the month on 
the usual conditions. The same privilege is attached to several other 
prayers and ejaculations, such as : " Sweetest Heart of Jesus, I im- 
plore, that I may ever love Thee more and more." Those who are in 
the habit of going to confession every week can gain any 
indulgence in the course of the week without going again to 
confession, except the Jubilee indulgence. More than one plenary 
indulgence may be gained at one and the same communion, provided 
the works prescribed for each severally be accomplished. If a visit 
to a church or public chapel is enjoined, it must be made on a separate 
occasion. Infirm persons are only required to go to confession; in- 
stead of receiving communion and visiting a church, if these be the 
conditions, they can gain the indulgence by performing some other 
work prescribed by their confessor. All who by illness or other un- 
avoidable circumstances are prevented from visiting a church, do not 
lose the indulgence, if they fulfil all the conditions within their 
power. Prayers for the intention of the Church are left to every one's 
discretion. In general, five Our Fathers and five Hail Marys are 
considered sufificient ; they must be repeated audibly, either before or 
after communion, and offered up for the peace of Christian princes, 
the extirpation of heresy, and the exaltation of the Church. 

The most important plenary indulgences are the Jubilee in- 
dulgence, the indulgence of the Portiuncula, and that of the 
Papal benediction. 

The Jubilee indulgence is granted every twenty-five years to the 
whole Church, and lasts for the whole year. The Jews kept the 
fiftieth year as a year of jubilee, or rejoicing. We have already ex- 
plained how this custom was introduced into the Church. The con- 
ditions for gaining it are: The reception of the sacraments and the 
visit to a church, besides at least one day of fasting and an alms. 
In the Jubilee year all other indulgences for the living are suspended 
(except that of the Angelus and for the hour of death), but if applied 
to the dead they continue in force. As a rule, the Jubilee indulgence 
can only be gained once, and that for one's self; but sometimes it is 
otherwise. Occasionally an extra Jubilee is proclaimed by the Sov- 
ereign Pontiff under special circumstances, such as his accession to 
the Papal throne, the opening of a council, et<j. The indulgence of 
the Portiun'oula can be gained repeatedly on the second of August, 
and on the evening before ; as often, in fact, as any one who has been 
to confession and communion visits the Portiuncula Chapel, or any 
other public chapel of the Franciscans or Poor Clares, and prays for 
the intentions of the Holy Father. The indulgence originated in this 
wise: While St. Francis was praying in his favorite church near 
Assisi, Our Lord appeared to him, with His blessed Mother and sev- 
eral saints. Francis entreated Our Lord to grant a plenary indulgence 
to all who after approaching the sacraments, should visit that church. 
Our Lord consented, bidding him go to the Pope, who would ratify 



638 The Means of Grace, 

the privilege. Francis accordingly repaired to Rome; the Holy 
Father granted the indulgence, fixing it for the second of August. 
Later Pontiffs extended it to all public chapels of the Franciscan 
Order, and some others. This indulgence can only be gained once 
for one's self; if gained more often, it must be applied to 
some one else. The communion need not necessarily be made in a 
church of the Order. A plenary indulgence may be gained by all who, 
after confession and communion, and prayer for the intention of the 
Church, receive the Papal benediction. Previous to the year 1870 
this used to be solemnly given after High Mass on great festivals 
from the balcony of St. Peter's. Bishops and priests are now and 
again authorized to give the Papal blessing to their flocks on special 
occasions, such as the close of a mission. 

A plenary indulgence may be gained in the hour of death 
by those who, having received the sacraments and invoked the 
holy name, receive the Papal blessing, or keep beside them some 
object blessed by the Holy Father; also by the members of most 
confraternities, and by all who have daily recited the three acts 
of faith, hope and charity, or some other similarly indulgenced 
prayer. 

If a sick man, desirous of gaining a plenary indulgence, should 
find it impossible to receive the sacraments, he may at least make 
an act of contrition; if he cannot utter the name of Jesus with his 
lips, he can at any rate invoke it in his heart. In any case perfect 
conformity to the will of God is essential. The majority of priests 
are empowered to give the papal benediction to the dying. Those 
who have received the necessary faculties can indulgence crosses, med- 
als and the like for the hour of death. It is enough if the faithful 
keep objects thus blessed in their houses, to enable them to gain the 
indulgence. Indulgences for the hour of death are also attached to 
membership of various confraternities. They may also be gained 
by making acts of faith, hope, and charity daily, in one's own words 
or otherwise. The same applies to several other short prayers, such 
as " Angel of God," etc. Indulgences obtained in the hour of death 
are purely personal; they cannot even be applied to the souls in 
purgatory. As the dying cannot, with the best of wills, perform 
works of penance, the Church almost entirely exempts them from the 
obligation of trying to discharge the temporal debt of punishment 
due to their sins. 

The partial indulgences granted by the Church are generally 
a quadragena, or forty days ; or for a period of a himdred days, 
a year, five or seven years, very rarely for thirty or a hundred 
years. Those fixed periods do not mark the number of days or 
years by which the purgatorial fires are abridged; they do but 
indicate that as much of the temporal punishment of sin is re- 
mitted as would have been remitted by a corresponding period 
of the canonical penances formerly imposed on penitents. 



The Sacraments, 639 

4. The Pope alone has power to grant indulgences which are 
for the whole Church; for in him alone jurisdiction over the whole 
Church is vested, and he is the steward of the Church's treasures. 

Bishops have the power to grant partial indulgences, but only 
for those in their own diocese; just as secular magistrates can only- 
judge cases which come within the sphere of their jurisdiction. 
Bishops are sometimes authorized by the Holy See to grant indul- 
gences of a year, or forty days, on such occasions as the dedication 
of a church. 

5. Indulgences may also be applied by way of suffrage to the 
suffering souls in purgatory, if this be expressly stated respecting 
the indulgence; a plenary indulgence is gained for them every 
time the holy sacrifice of the Mass is offered on a privileged altar. 

The communion of saints enables us to assist the holy souls in 
purgatory by applying to them our good works; those good works, 
that is, to which the remission of temporal punishment is attached. 
If we desire to gain an indulgence for the faithful departed we 
must see that we are ourselves in a state of grace. " Let him who 
would help to deliver the holy souls from purgatory," says St. Francis 
Xavier, " first see that he delivers, his own soul from hell." The ap- 
plication of indulgences to the souls of the departed is by way of 
suffrage, not of absolution. It is by no means certain that the in- 
dividual for whom a plenary indulgence is gained will be forthwith 
released from purgatory; the amount of punishment thereby re- 
mitted to him rests entirely with God to determine. The indulgence 
of the privileged altar consists in this, that whenever Mass is cele- 
brated at that particular altar a plenary indulgence is given from 
the treasures of the Church to one of the souls in purgatory. In 
every cathedral there is one such altar, and in many parish churches 
or churches of an Order; the altars thus privileged are generally 
indicated by the inscription altare privilegiatum, and black vest- 
ments must be used when Mass is said at one of them, if the rubrics 
allow of it on that day. The privilege must be renewed by applica- 
tion to the bishop every seven years. The indulgence can be gained 
for one individual only, and for that one the Mass must be offered, 
but the priest may include in his intention other persons deceased. 
The intention of the priest is not necessary to the gaining of the 
indulgence; it will be seen that bv no other means is a plenary in- 
dulgence so surely gained as by this, since it depends entirely upon 
the offering of the holy sacrifice, not upon the spiritual state of any 
individual. But whether the Mass celebrated at the privileged altar 
effects the complete deliverance of the soul from the pains of pur- 
gatory cannot be known, as it depends solely on the mercy of God. 
Priests who have made the heroic act of charity for the holy souls 
have the same privilege in their own person. 

6. The gaining of indulgences is most salutary (Council of 
Trent, 25), because w^ thereby keep far from us temporal evils, 
and are stimulated to the accomplishment of good works. 

The indulgences we gain avert from us sickness, calamities, 
temptations, etc., which, if no indulgence be gained, come upon us 



640 The Means of Grace. 

as the temporal punishment of sin. Thus those who neglect this 
practice, may he compared to a traveller who although he might 
reach his destination by a short and easy route, prefers to take 
a long and toilsome road; he is his own worst enemy. Some people 
take exception at the doctrine of indulgences, but this is because they 
do not understand it; others condemn it, because of the abuses in 
the Middle Ages. Was there ever a good and holy thing which was 
not misused by the wicked ? The abuse of a thing does not diminish 
its usefulness. Therefore do not despise indulgences, for by despising 
them many have fallen into error and perdition. 



5. EXTREME UNCTION. 

Christ is the Good Samaritan, for by the hands of Hisr repre- 
sentative, the priest. He pours into the wounds of the sick oil to effect 
his spiritual and physical cure. 

1. In administering Extreme TTnction the priest anoints the 
Christian who is in danger of death with the holy oils upon the 
organs of his five senses, and prays over him; by means of which 
the spiritual and not unfrequently the bodily malady of the sick 
man is cured. 

The priest anoints the sick man with consecrated oil in the form 
of a cross on his five senses, which have been instrumental to his sins 
(eyes, ears, nose, mouth, hands and feet) ; at every unction he re- 
peats the following form of prayer : " Through this holy unction and 
through His most tender mercy, may the Lord pardon thee whatever 
sins thou hast committed by seeing, hearing, etc." If the sick man 
is actually expiring, the priest only anoints his forehead; but he 
continues to anoint the other parts, so long as life has not departed. 
Extreme Unction is also called the last sacrament, because it is 
generally the last which is administered to the dying. 

Extreme Unction is mentioned by St. James in his epistle. 

We read : " Is any man sick among you ? Let him bring in the 
priests of the Church, and let them pray over him, anointing him 
with oil in the name of the Lord ; and the prayer of faith shall save 
the sick man, and the Lord shall raise him up : and if he be in sins, 
they shall be forgiven him" (Jas. v. 14, 15). Pope Innocent I., in 
the fourth century, expressly declared that these words referred to 
the Sacrament of Extreme Unction; and in the sixth century St. 
Csesarius, Bishop of Aries, exhorts Christians in case of serious 
illness, to receive the Lord's body and be anointed with oil for their 
bodily restoration and the forgiveness of their sins. The sacred 
unction of the sick was instituted by Our Lord as a true sacrament 
of the ISTew Law (Council of Trent, 14, 4). It confers grace, remits 
sin, and comforts the sick. 

2. Extreme TTnction acts spiritually as oil does materially; it 
strengthens, heals, and aids the soul to attain eternal salvation. 



The Sacraments, 641 

Oil stren^hens the body (pugilists or wrestlers are rubbed with 
oil to give them greater power, and render it difficult for their ad- 
versary to grasp them) ; it possesses a healing power (witness the 
Good Samaritan, who poured oil on the wounds of the man who 
had fallen among thieves) ; and it imparts suppleness and flexibility. 

1. Extreme Unction strengthens the sick because it confers 
on him grace to bear more easily the inconveniences and pains 
of sickness, and enables him more readily to resist temptation of 
all kinds. 

A complete change is sometimes wrought in the sick by the re- 
ception of this sacrament; whereas they were previously impatient 
and in great dread of death, they become tranquil and patient and 
resigned to the will of God. At the close of life the adversary of 
our souls strains all the powers of his craft to ruin us utterly if he 
can, and make us fall from our trust in the mercy of God (Council 
of Trent, 14). Extreme Unction banishes the demon. It is recorded 
of St. Eleazar that on the near approach of death, his countenance 
became distorted, and he cried out that the devil was tormenting 
him; but after he had been anointed, peace and joy returned to him. 

2. Extreme Unction is for the healing of the soul, and often- 
times of the body; it effects the remission of mortal sins, which 
through infirmity of mind or body the sick man has not been 
able to confess, as well as the remission of some temporal punish- 
ment. And besides, at times it obtains bodily health, when ex- 
pedient for the welfare of the soul. 

Extreme Unction compensates for all that, through no fault of 
his own, the sick man left incomplete in the Sacrament of Penance. 
It is thus the completion of the Sacrament of Penance, or the penance 
of the sick. By reason of physical and mental weakness the sick are 
rarely capable of making a good confession or doing penance ; there- 
fore the Church deals leniently with them, and by this unction com- 
mends them to the mercy of God. This anointing cleanses away 
sin, if there be any still to be expiated, and cancels a part of the 
penalty of sin, in proportion to the contrition and devotion where- 
with the sacrament is received. Extreme Unction often obtains 
restoration to health. If God foresees that the sick man, if he re- 
cover, will make a good use of the remainder of his days for his 
spiritual advancement. He restores him to health, granting him a 
reprieve, as it were, that he may prepare himself better for death. 
But if He foresees that it will be otherwise. He takes him out of the 
world. As a rule, the sick experience some alleviation after re- 
ceiving Extreme Unction; this is not to be explained on natural 
grounds; the peace of mind produced by confession and reconcilia- 
tion with God acts beneficially upon the body. And in some cases 
by the interposition of divine power health is restored when human 
skill could do nothing. How foolish are those who imagine that if 
they receive Extreme Unction it will be their death warrant! 

3. Extreme Unction facilitates our salvation, by increasing 
in us sanctifying grace and divine charity. 



642 The Means of Grace, ' 

In common with all the other sacraments Extreme Unction im- 
parts a higher degree of sanctifying grace. This is of more im- 
portance to us at our death than at any other moment, for the degree 
of our future felicity depends on the degree of sanctifying grace we 
possess. And the greater our love of God, the more capable shall we 
be of the enjoyment of eternal bliss. Thus this holy sacrament 
cleanses away all that is an impediment to our eternal salvation. 

3. Extreme TJnction can only be administered to persons who 
are in danger of death; and they ought to receive it without de- 
lay for the sake both of their physical and spiritual health. 

Only in cases of serious illness, that is, when there is danger of 
death, can the sick receive Extreme Unction. A soldier cannot re- 
ceive it before going into action, nor a criminal condemned to death. 
Exception may be made in regard to very aged persons; their ad- 
vanced age renders them constantly liable to death. The administra- 
tion of the holy oils should not be postponed until the last moment, 
for if the sick man be unconscious, they will profit him little; since, 
as has been already remarked, the utility of this sacrament to the 
soul depends upon the contrition and devotion with which it is re- 
ceived. And the body cannot profit by it, if the vital spark be all but 
extinct. It is little use calling out the fire engine when the house is al- 
most burnt down. He who enters upon the journey from time to 
eternity without fortifying himself with the last sacraments, is like 
a traveller who starts on his way with an empty purse. Nor can there 
be contempt of so great a sacrament without heinous sin and an in- 
jury to the Holy Ghost Himself (Council of Trent, 14, 9). 

Those who have not yet received the Sacrament of Penance 
cannot receive Extreme Unction since it is the completion of 
penance. 

To this class belong idiots, and children who have not yet attained 
the age of reason. It must not, however, be supposed that this in- 
cludes all children under seven, for children of five years of age have 
been known on their death-bed to ask for a priest, because they were 
conscious of having sinned against their parents. 

Extreme Unction can only be administered to the sick once 
in the same illness; but if the sick person recovers temporarily, 
and then has a relapse, he may be anointed again. 

4. Before being anointed the sick man ought to confess his 
sins, and receive holy communion ; and afterwards the Papal bless- 
ing is generally given to him. 

Confession should precede Extreme Unction, because the recipient 
of the sacrament must be in a state of grace. Extreme Unction is a 
remedy ; and as medicine is for the living, not the dead, so this sacra- 
ment is of no utility to those who are spiritually dead Every priest 
who has been duly authorized by the bishop, may give the Papal bene- 
diction with a plenary indulgence, provided he makes use of the pre- 



Tlie Sacraments, ' 643 

scribed formula. The sick man must call upon the holy name of Jesus 
(the priest usually repeats some ejaculatory prayer to him, in which 
the name of Jesus occurs) verbally, if he can still speak, if not, men- 
tally, otherwise the indulgence is not gained, and the crucifix is 
offered him to be kissed. 

It is the duty of relatives, and of those who are in attendance 
upon the sick, to see that he receives the last sacraments in due 
time. 

This responsibility rests partly with the doctor, who, as a matter 
of course, ought to apprise the friends of a sick person of his condi- 
tion when it becomes serious. Catholics ought therefore if possible 
to secure the services of a Christian physician. Sometimes the at- 
tendants on a sick man fear to agitate him by mentioning the last 
sacraments to him. This is indeed mistaken kindness, for they 
cannot thereby retard the approach of death. Such false friends 
resemble people who do not warn a blind man that he is nearing a 
precipice, lest they should frighten him. Their cowardice will give 
them much to answer for. The friends of the sick man should set the 
room in order, and have everything that is needed in readiness for the 
administration of the last sacraments. A table should be covered 
with a white linen cloth, with a crucifix and two lighted tapers upon 
it, besides a vessel containing holy water, because the priest has to 
sprinkle both the chamber and the bystanders, and also a glass con- 
taining a little clean water, for the priest to wash his fingers and give 
the ablutions to the sick man after communion. Some cotton wool 
must also be provided to wipe the parts that have been anointed. 
While the sick man makes his confession let all leave the room, as 
the priest may have to speak above a whisper. 



6. HOLY ORDERS. 

At the time of His ascension, Our Lord lifted up His hands, 
blessed His apostles, and sent them forth into the world to preach the 
Gospel and dispense the sacraments (Luke xxiv. 50). The bishop 
does much the same when he ordains priests. (The imposition of 
hands signifies that something is given, since gifts are distributed 
with the hand.) 

1. At the administration of Holy Orders the bishop lays his 
h^^nds on the candidates for ordination, calls down upon them the 
Holy Ghost, anoints their hands, and presents the sacred vessels 
to them. 

They thereby receive, in addition to a plenitude of grace, 
the sacerdotal powers; more especially the power to offer the 
' oly sacrifice and to forgive sins. 

Holy Orders are administered during the celebration of Mass. 
The candidates for ordination first prostrate themselves upon their 
faces before the altar; then the bishop lays his hands upon the head 



644 The Means of Grace. 

of each one severally, the priests present doing the same. He next 
arrays them in the sacerdotal vestments; the Yeni Sancte Spiritus 
is sung, and he anoints the hands of each one in turn with the sacred 
chrism in the form of a cross. He then gives the chalice and paten 
into their hands, thereby conferring on them the power to offer the 
holy sacrifice; after which he addresses to them the words of Our 
Lord : " Receive ye the Holy Ghost ; whose sins you shall forgive, they 
are forgiven, etc." Finally the newly-ordained are required to promise 
respect and obedience to the bishop. The ceremony of anointing the 
hands, and presenting the sacred vessels is only an accessory; it was 
not in use until the ninth century, and now has no place in the Greek 
ritual. ISTot only supernatural powers, but graces are imparted in the 
Sacrament of Orders. By this sacred ordinance the Holy Ghost is 
given (Council of Trent, 13, 2). 

The Sacrament of Holy Orders was administered in the time 
of the apostles. 

We read that the apostles consecrated Paul and Barnabas with 
prayer and imposition of hands (Acts xiii. 3), and in like manner 
St. Paul consecrated Timothy (2 Tim. i. 6). St. Augustine speaks 
of Orders as a sacrament when he inveighs against the Donatists, 
who asserted that while Baptism confers what can never be lost, the 
right of administering Baptism may be lost. " Both," he declares, 
" are sacraments, and can only be received once." The Sacrament of 
Orders was unquestionably instituted by Our Lord at the Last 
Supper. 

2. The office of the priesthood, to which a man is raised by 
Holy Orders, is one of great dignity, but likewise one of no slight 
difficulty and of vast responsibility. 

The priesthood is the highest dignity upon earth. It surpasses 
that of kings and emperors, nay, even of the angels themselves. " For," 
as St. John Chrysostom remarks, " the power of kings is only over the 
bodies of men, whereas that of the priest is over their souls." On 
the priest are conferred powers not accorded to angels; for to what 
angel was it ever given to convert bread into the body of the Lord by 
his word? and not all the angels together could grant pardon for a 
single sin. By his office a priest is only concerned with heavenly 
things ; he stands between God and man ; he lays our petition before 
the Most High and conveys divine graces to us. He is a mediator 
between God and man, the angel of the Lord of hosts (Mai. ii. 7), 
the messenger of God to make known His will to men. He is God's 
representative. His ambassador. His plenipotentiary; therefore what- 
soever honor we show to the priest, we pay to God Himself. Does 
not Our Lord Himself say : " He that heareth you, heareth Me ; and 
he that despiseth you, despiseth Me " (Luke x. 16) ? In fact, St. 
Peter Damian says, God actually follows the priest, for what he de- 
clares on earth is ratified in heaven; and at his word the Second 
Person of the Holy Trinity becomes fiesh beneath his hand as at the 
Incarnation. Hence we do well to address the priest as " your rever- 
ence." St. Francis of Assisi used to say that if he met an angel and 
a priest at the same time he should salute the priest first. The 
sacerdotal office is also one of great difficulty ; the obligations resting 



The Sacraments. 645 

upon xhe priest are neither few nor light. He has to recite the 
breviary daily, which cannot be done under an hour and a quarter; 
he is pledged to lifelong celibacy ; he has to visit the sick at any hour 
of the day or night when he may be called upon; he has to take the 
last sacraments to the dying, however contagious the disease from 
which they are suffering; he has often to sit for long hours in the 
confessional, to fast late, on account of the late Masses; he is bound 
to renounce all worldly amusements (such as dancing), to be liberal 
towards the poor, and much more besides. Priests ought to be the 
salt of the earth (Matt. v. 13). Nor must it be overlooked that zealous 
priests are in the present day frequently the objects of suspicion and 
persecution, and their apostolic labors are ill-rewarded. The votaries 
of the world are inclined to treat their priests like the dog in the 
fable, who bit the hand that was stretched out to save him from 
drowning. The priestly office is besides one of immense responsi- 
bility. If the wolf comes and rends the sheep, the shepherd is taken 
to task. So it is with the priests ; they have to render an account of 
the souls committed to their charge (Heb. xiii. 17). " The duties of 
those who will have to give account for souls," says St. Bernard, " are 
heavy and onerous." On the day of his ordination St. John Chrysos- 
tom said : " I now need your prayers a thousandfold more, lest in 
the Day of Judgment I should be cast into the exterior darkness." 

Since the sacerdotal office is in itself an office of such great 
dignity, we owe profound respect to the priest on account of 
his office, even if his life should not correspond to it. 

Nothing can take away the dignity attaching to the priestly 
office, not even an ungodly life; therefore we ought always to enter- 
tain great reverence for it. Even pagan monarchs have been known 
to manifest deep veneration for the priests of the true God. When 
Alexander the Great was about to make a triumphal entry into 
Jerusalem, the high priest went out to meet him with all the priests 
arrayed in festal vestments, in order to ask a favor of him. Alex- 
ander dismounted from his horse, and instantly granted all that he 
asked. And when the general of the army expressed his surprise, 
Alexander replied : " It is not the high priest to whom I pay homage, 
but to the true God, Whose servant he is." Attila also, the terrible 
King of the Huns, when advancing upon Rome to plunder the city, 
allowed himself to be prevailed upon by Pope Leo the Great, to desist 
from his purpose. Yet almighty God permits His priests to be en- 
compassed with infirmity, in order that they may have the more 
compassion on them that are ignorant and that err (Heb. v. 2). St. 
Francis of Sales said of priests : " I will close my eyes to their faults, 
and only see in them God's representatives." How blameworthy 
are those who publish far and wide the misdeeds of a priest ! " Are 
we," asks St. Augustine, "to think slightingly of Christ and the 
apostles, because there was a Judas among them? Who will show 
me any body of men upon earth who are without faults? " 

Since the office of the priesthood is one of much labor and 
grave responsibilities, no man ought to take Holy Orders who is 
not called to the sacerdotal state. 



646 The Means of Grace. 

Let no man become a priest who feels no attraction for the sacred 
ministry; who has no longing to save souls, who leads an irregular 
life, or who only thinks of the priesthood as a means of gaining a 
living easily, and enjoying a comfortable competence. Parents are 
greatly to blame who force their sons to take Orders without a voca- 
tion, for those who enter the priesthood without a true vocation are 
unhappy and discontented all their life long. They neglect the 
duties of their calling, give scandal, and finally too often lose their 
souls. For this reason many eminent saints positively refused to 
receive Holy Orders or to be raised to the episcopate. St. Francis 
of Assisi remained a deacon to the end of his days. St. Cyprian 
concealed himself when he was to be appointed Bishop or Carthage; 
St. John Chrysost-om and St. Basil acted in a similar manner. They 
all considered themselves unworthy of the dignity offered them, and 
only accepted it when they recognized it to be the will of God that 
they should do so. Almighty God calls to the priesthood whom He 
will ; witness Our Lord's words to the apostles : " You have not chosen 
Me, but I have chosen you " (John xv. 16). 

3. The Sacrament of Holy Orders only confers the perpetual 
power, not the right, to exercise the functions of a priest. The 
newly ordained cannot therefore make use in any place of their 
sacerdotal powers, until they have received ecclesiastical authori- 
zation. 

The qualification for the sacred ministry consists in the trans- 
mission of the powers appertaining to the sacerdotal office: those of 
a teacher, a priest and a pastor. In the Old Testament the priestly 
powers were hereditary in Aaron's family (Exod. xxviii.) ; in the I^ew 
Testament they are handed down by spiritual descent by means 
of Holy Orders. Besides these powers, the priest receives at ordina- 
tion abundant graces belonging to his state. Outwardly he may ap- 
pear the same, but inwardly he is a changed man. An indelible 
character is imprinted upon his soul by that ordinance; the powers 
he has received can never be lost, into whatever sins he may fall. 
He who has once been a priest cannot again become a layman (Coun- 
cil of Trent, 23, 4) ; a priest who has apostatized and been recon- 
ciled to the Church is not re-ordained. All the sacerdotal acts of a 
priest who has seceded from the Church are valid, only he cannot 
forgive sins (except in the case of the dying, when no other priest 
can be had). Priests of the schismatic Greek Church are not or- 
dained again, if they return to the allegiance of the Catholic Church ; 
but the Protestant clergy most certainly are. Ecclesiastical juris- 
diction is given to the priest by his bishop; the bishops receive it 
from the Pope. The secular authorities have no power to grant 
ecclesiastical jurisdiction, for it is not theirs to give. Even in the 
time of the apostles the deacons were not nominated by the people; 
the apostles ordained those who had been chosen and appointed them 
to the work (Acts vi. 3, 6). St. Timothy was consecrated to the 
episcopate by the imposition of the hands of the priesthood (1 Tim. 
i. 14). Consequently the apostles called themselves the "ministers 
of Christ" (1 Cor. iv. 1). Any one who should attempt to exercise 
sacerdotal functions without the authorization of the bishop, would. 



The Sac-a'^enfs, 647 

as Our Lord says, be a thief and a robber, because " he entereth not 
by the door into the sheepfold, but climbeth in some other way" (John 
X. 1). A priest must have faculties for hearing confessions, from 
the bishop of the diocese where he happens to be. This is separate 
from the pastoral office. A catechist, or teacher, who imparts re- 
ligious instruction should also have the episcopal authorization. 
Any one who should be so daring as to exercise any priestly func- 
tions without having been admitted to Holy Orders or without epis- 
copal authorization, would, in Catholic countries, be punished by 
the secular government; at any rate, terrible chastisements would 
fall on him from God. King Ozias presumed, in spite of the warn- 
ing of the priests, to burn incense on the altar of incense; he was 
immediately struck with leprosy, and was a leper until the day of 
his death (2 Par. xxvi.). In the time of Moses, Core, with two 
hundred and fifty of the leading men of the synagogue, rebelled 
against Moses and presumed to offer incense in the tabernacle; they 
were destroyed by fire from the Lord, and the earth swallowed up 
the three ringleaders (Numb. xvi.). 

4. No one can be admitted to priest's Orders who has not at- 
tained the age of twenty-four years (Council of Trent, 23, 12). 

The Holy See has the right of dispensing candidates for the 
priesthood if they are within twenty months of the required age 
Besides the prescribed ages, those who are to be raised to the priest- 
hood must possess the following qualifications: They must have 
the knowledge suited to, and necessary for, the due discharge of 
their functions; they must be conspicuous for piety and chastity; 
they must have been born in wedlock and be free from physical de- 
fects which might excite derision in others. Men who have been 
married twice are disqualified for the priesthood, although those 
who have been married once may, under certain conditions, be re- 
ceived. All men cannot be priests (Eph. iv. 11; 1 Cor. xii. 29). Yet 
we frequently find all the faithful spoken of as priests (1 Pet. ii. 
9), inasmuch as they ought to accomplish to the glory of God good 
works which are in a certain measure a spiritual oblation; they are 
priests inasmuch as they immolate themselves in the service of 
God as spiritual victims. In the same sense the faithful in general 
are spoken of as kings, because they ought to rule over their fleshly 
lusts. 

5. Six other orders of ministry precede the priesthood, four 
lesser and two greater. 

By these several and divers Orders, as by certain steps, advance 
is made unto the priesthood (Council of Trent, 23, 4). This is to 
emphasize the dignity of the priesthood. For the same reason a 
fixed period of time must intervene between the reception of the dif- 
ferent degrees of higher orders. The first preparation for Orders 
is the reception of the tonsure, by which a man is taken into the 
ranks of the clergy, and becomes a cleric, no longer a layman. In 
giving the tonsure, the bishop cuts off some of the hair from the top 
of the candidate's head. After this the four minor Orders are 
^iven, which impart to him who receives them the right to minister 



648 The Means of Grace, 

to the priest by virtue of his office. The first of the three greater 
Orders, the subdiaconate, follows. This was formerly reckoned 
among the minor Orders, but is classed by the Council of Trent 
among the major Orders; it confers the right to arrange everything 
in the sanctuary, and serve the priest at the altar, and pledges the 
recipient to celibacy and to the recitation of the breviary. The 
bishop may empower an ordinary priest to administer the tonsure 
and the four minor Orders, but not so the greater. 

6. There are three degrees in the Sacrament of Orders: The 
consecration of deacons, priests, and bishops. These three con- 
stitute but one sacrament. 

The second of the greater Orders is the diaconate, which was in- 
stituted by the apostles for the relief of the poor. It confers the 
power to preach, to baptize, and to dispense holy communion. The 
three most celebrated deacons mentioned in the annals of the Church 
are St. Stephen, who was stoned by the Jews; St. Lawrence, who 
was broiled upon a gridiron in Rome; and St. Francis of Assisi, the 
founder of the Franciscan Order, who bore in his body the sacred 
stigmata. One year after the acceptance of the diaconate follows 
ordination proper, the priesthood, whereby the power is given to 
offer the holy sacrifice of the Mass, and to forgive sins. There is 
one degree higher than the priesthood, and that is the episcopate. 
By this power is conferred to ordain priests, to administer Confirma- 
tion and to rule the Church of God. For the consecration of a 
bishop three bishops must take part. These three ordinations form 
but one sacrament. The consecration of deacons appertains vir- 
tually to the Sacrament of Holy Orders, because it confers an inferior 
part of the sacerdotal powers, and is administered with imposition 
of hands and prayer. St. Paul mentions deacons together with bish- 
ops and priests; the Fathers speak of them with the utmost rever- 
ence, as the "ministers of God," and the Council of Trent reckons 
them of the ecclesiastical hierarchy (Council of Trent, 23, 6). The 
consecration of priests appertains to the Sacrament of Orders, be- 
cause by it the greater part of the sacerdotal powers are conferred. 
The consecration of bishops is the completion of the Sacrament of 
Orders; by it the plenitude of the sacerdotal power is communicated. 
The principal distinction between a bishop and a priest is that the 
former can ordain priests and the latter cannot. When at the 
Council of Alexandria in 319, the Arians accused St. Athanasius, 
who was then bishop of that town, of having treated a priest named 
Ischyras with undue severity, the Synod dismissed the charge on 
the ground that Ischyras was not a priest, since he had been ordained 
by a priest, not a bishop. 

7. It is the duty of the faithful to pray God to send them 
good priests. 

Our Lord says: "Pray ye the Lord of the harvest that He send 
lorth laborers into His harvest" (Matt. ix. 38). Remember that a 
priest is the salvation or the perdition of his flock. In the Old Testa- 
ment we read that when other scourges were of no avail to turn the 



Tlie Sacrcmients, 649 

people, hardened in sin, from their evil ways, God sent upon them the 
heaviest scourge of all, wicked and corrupt priests. Let us therefore 
make it our continual prayer, that we may have good priests. The 
Ember days are appointed for this purpose. Special prayer should be 
offered to the Holy Ghost, for unless a priest is enlightened by the 
Holy Spirit we may apply to him the words : " If the blind lead the 
blind, both fall into the pit" (Matt. xv. 14). 



7. MATRIMONY. 
The Institution and Nature of Matrimony. 

What food is to the individual, matrimony is to humanity in gen- 
eral. For as food serves to maintain the life of the individual, so 
marriage serves to maintain the life of the human race. Since the 
principal object of marriage, the right training of children, can only 
be attained when a man and a woman are united together by an in- 
dissoluble bond, the wise Creator in the beginning only created two 
human beings, saying : " They two shall be one in flesh " (Gen. ii. 
24). 

1. God Himself instituted matrimony in the beginning of the 
world, for the procreation of the human race, and the mutual as- 
sistance of husband and wife. 

Matrimony was instituted by God for the propagation of the hu- 
man race ; for He said to our first parents : " Increase and multiply 
and fill the earth " (Gen. i. 28). St. Francis of Sales calls matrimony 
the nursery-ground of Christianity, destined to fill the earth with 
believers, and complete the number of the elect in heaven. It was 
also instituted for the mutual support of the parties contracting it, 
for God said before Eve was created : " It is not good for man to be 
alone, let us make him a help like unto himself " (Gen. ii. 18). The 
woman being the weaker, needs some one on whom to lean; the man 
needs some one to care for him. The man is characterized by greater 
strength and energy; he seeks a sphere of activity in the world. The 
woman's nature is cast in a softer mould ; her sphere of work is beside 
the domestic hearth. Thus the two complete each other, and each acts 
beneficially on the other. Matrimony has also a third object, that 
of preventing the sin of which the Apostle speaks in the first Epistle 
to the Corinthians (1 Cor. vii. 2). He who would set marriage aside, 
would give free rein to impurity. Many take a low view of marriage ; 
they consider it as affording a legitimate means of indulging their 
lusts. Such persons will not be happy or contented, and will neglect 
the duties of their state. The happiness of matrimony depends to 
a great extent on taking an exalted view of its object. 

Matrimony is a divine and by no means a human institution. 

It is because matrimony was ordained of God that the Church 
calls it a "holy and godly state." The opinion of the Manichees, 
that marriage was to be rejected, was condemned by the Church. 



650 The Means of Grace, 

Even the most uncivilized nations considered matrimony to be a 
divine institution, for they practised religious ceremonies of some 
kind on the occasion of a marriage, offering sacrifices or prayers. God 
Himself appointed the laws of marriage first through Moses and after- 
wards by Our Lord. 

2. Christian marriage is a contract between man and woman, 
binding them to an undivided and indissoluble partnership, and 
conferring on them at the same time grace to fulfil all the duties 
required of them. 

Marriage is therefore not merely a contract; it is at the same 
time an act by which grace is conferred. This contract is not con- 
cluded in the presence of a minister of the Church solely for the sake 
of obtaining the ecclesiastical benediction upon the betrothed couple, 
but in order that they may be truly united together before God in 
wedlock. It was this covenant, entered into in presence of a minister 
of the Church, which Our Lord raised to the dignity of a sacrament. 
Marriage contracted without the solemnities required by the Church 
in all countries where the decree of the Council of Trent has 
been duly promulgated is invalid and null (Council of Trent, 24, 1). 
A contract which is invalid cannot become a sacrament, any more 
than wine, if it be not really wine, can be converted in the Mass into 
the blood of Christ. Matrimony is a type of the union between Christ 
and the Church (Eph. v. 32). As the Church, the Bride of Christ is 
one, so the man has but one wife. As Christ and the Church are in- 
separably united, so the union of the married is perpetual and indis- 
soluble. As the union of Christ and the Church is a covenant of grace, 
so also is the union of husband and wife. Christ is the Head of the 
Church, and the man is the head of the woman. The Church is sub- 
ject to Christ, so the wife is obedient to the husband. Christ and 
the Church are animated by one spirit, and so it should be with hus- 
band and wife. Christ never abandons the Church, and the Church 
can never be unfaithful to Christ; so married people must never be 
unfaithful to one another. 

Matrimony is declared to be a sacrament by St. Paul, and the 
early Fathers of the Church. 

St. Paul calls matrimony a great sacrament, because it is typical 
of the union of Christ with the Church (Eph. v. 32), a union by which 
grace is imparted. St. Augustine says that the superiority of mar- 
riage among the people of God consists in the sanctity of the sacra- 
ment. " The heathens," says St. John Chrysostom, " estimated the 
happiness of marriage by the number of children, whereas the Chris- 
tian considers rather the sanctity of the sacrament." Some of the 
Fathers are of opinion that Christ raised matrimony to a sacrament 
at the marriage of Cana. At any rate the Church expressly declares 
l;hat it is truly and properly one of the seven sacraments of the evan- 
gelical law instituted by Christ (Council of Trent, 24, 1). 

3. Civil marriage is to be distinguished from Christian mar- 
riage, inasmuch as it is no sacrament, and consequently in the 
sight of God no true and real marriage for Catholics. 



The Sacraments, 651 

Civil marriage may be said to have originated with Luther, for 
he prepared the way for the State to legislate concerning marriage. 
What he began, the French revolution completed; for marriage was 
then declared to be a civil contract, concluded before a government 
official. Civil marriage is obligatory or compulsory when, as is the 
case in some countries, the marriage is otherwise not recognized by 
the State; it is optional, when the parties are free to choose whether 
the ceremony shall be civil or religious, as in America; finally it is 
unavoidable, if on account of the priest being debarred from marry- 
ing them through political reasons, or on other obvious grounds, the 
persons desirous of being married cannot be united otherwise than by 
the secular authorities. Civil marriage is not a sacrament, because 
it is not contracted in the manner ordained by God and the Church; 
it is nothing more or less than a legal form, which must be gone 
through in order that the marriage may be recognized by the State, 
and Catholics must submit to it, if there is no other means of having 
their union recognized by the State. They should, however, see that 
the ecclesiastical ceremony takes place as soon after as possible; for 
until their marriage has been solemnized by the Church, they are 
bound to live apart, as in the sight of God they are not really husband 
and wife. Catholics who contract a civil marriage and are not after- 
wards married in a church, cannot obtain absolution, and are excluded 
from the sacraments until they obtain the sanction of God and of 
the Church upon their union, or give it up altogether. Catholics 
who prefer civil marriage when it is optional, or content themselves 
with it when it is unavoidable, are excommunicated. The Holy See 
condemns civil marriages in no measured terms; Pope Pius IX. de- 
clares that the union of man and woman, if not a sacrament, is a 
shameful concubinage, although perfectly legal according to the civil 
code.* 

Civil marriage has disastrous results for the State, for it 
undermines faith, authority, and morals. 

The Holy Father asserts civil marriage to be a fatal institution. 
To render it compulsory is to overthrow the law of God, for it is tan- 
tamount to asserting that Christian marriage as ordained by God is 
invalid, that a union blessed by the Church is contrary to law. What 
would be said if stealing, or any other crime forbidden by the divine 
command, were enforced by the law of the land? Rebellion such as 
this against God cannot fail to undermine faith in God and respect 
for His commandments; and experience proves that the government 
which undermines the divine authority brings about its own down- 
fall. Civil marriages are also detrimental to morality. Divorce is 



*What was true formerly of places only where the decree Tametsi of 
the Council of Trent was in vigor is now the law everywhere in virtue of 
the Decree Ne Temere of August 2, 1907, and in effect since Easter, 1908, 
ordering that a Catholic cannot marry validly either a Catholic or a non- 
Catholic except in the presence of the Bishop or the parish priest of the 
place or a priest duly authorized by them (wherever possible) and at 
least two witnesses. 



652 Tlie Means of Grace. 

an easy matter for persons who have been married by the registrar; 
on a comparatively slight disagreement or offence they are separated, 
each being free to contract a second marriage. What is the conse- 
quence? The flood-gates are opened to admit unbridled license, the 
so-called free-love advocated by the Socialist. This is proved by the 
number of divorce cases following on the introduction of civil mar- 
riage; nor need we wonder, for in a civil marriage no promise of 
mutual love, no vow of fidelity is required from the contracting 
parties. 

Tlfie Characteristics of Matrimony. 

According to the ordinance of Christ, Christian marriage is 
strictly a union of two persons only, and it is indissoluble. 

Matrimony was raised by Our Lord to the dignity of a state of 
evangelical perfection, to which weightier responsibilities and more 
laborious duties were attached than in the ages preceding His advent. 
He therefore granted greater graces to those who should enter into 
wedlock. 

1. Christian marriage consists of the union of one man and 
one woman only. 

By creating only one man and one woman, God manifested it to 
be His will that marriage should be the union of two persons only. 
Our Lord pointed out that in the beginning this was so (Matt. xix. 
4). The marriage that does not answer to this description cannot 
possibly be a true and lasting partnership; domestic strife must in- 
fallibly ensue. Yet in the earliest times God permitted polygamy, 
to prevent greater evils. A plurality of wives is forbidden by Our 
Lord (Luke xvi. 18), consequently it is prohibited most strictly by 
the law of the Church. Polygamy is unlawful, and a violation of 
the natural law (Council of Trent, 2S, 2). It continues, however, to 
exist among Mohammedans, and among Jews in the East; but in 
the West ever since the Middle Ages the Jews have given it up, in 
deference to the code of morality observed by European nations. 

2. Christian marriage is indissoluble; that is to say, neither 
husband nor wife can contract a second marriage during the life- 
time of the other. 

. The principal object of matrimonv is to provide for the proper 
bringing up of children, an object which could not be attained if the 
nuptial tie were dissoluble. What would become of the children if 
the parents were free to separate at their pleasure? Our Lord 
strictly forbids any one to marry again as long as the partner of his 
or her first marriage is living (Matt. v. 32; Mark x. 11). Under the 
law of Moses, the Jews were, it is true, permitted under exceptional 
circumstances to put away their wives; but this was only by reason of 
the hardness of their hearts, and to prevent worse evils (Matt. xix. 
8y Christ withdrew this permission; He says expressly: "What 



The Sacraments, 65^. 

God hath joined together, let no man put asinider " (Matt. xix. 4-9). 
Hence the Popes have never allowed one of two lawfully married per- 
sons to contract a second marriage during the lifetime of the other 
party. Not even for the sake of averting the most serious calamities 
could they consent to such a thing. It is well known that King- 
Henry VIII. of England could not wring from the Holy See per- 
mission to divorce his rightful wife, and marry another. That even 
in consideration of the services he had rendered to the cause of re- 
ligion, and of the fearful consequences which would ensue upon the 
introduction of the Lutheran heresy into England could Clement 
VII. be prevailed upon to give any other reply than this : " Non 
possumus; I have no authority to set aside the divine law." " Matri- 
mony," says St. Augustine, " is an iron chain." A man can sell a 
house which he has bought if it does not suit him ; but once married, 
he cannot get rid of his wife. The soul can separate from the body 
sooner than the husband from the wife. And if either party should 
contract a second marriage while the other is still alive, he or she 
commits a mortal sin, and the marriage is invalid. It is, however, 
possible for a married couple to be separated, provided there are suffi- 
cient grounds for separation. If either party is guilty of adulterj^ 
the separation may be for life, since by the violation of a contract 
the rights conferred by that contract are lost; yet neither can enter 
upon fresh espousals (Matt. v. 32). Dissolute conduct, or cruelty 
on either side, would afford a reason for a temporary separation, 
which must be judicial. And if the parties agree to cohabit again 
they can do so at will. 



The Graces Conferred in Matrimony. 

The Sacrament of Matrimony confers upon Christians who 
embrace that state both an increase of sanctifying grace, and in 
addition the special graces necessary to enable them to discharge 
the duties required of them. 

The special graces annexed to this sacrament are: (1), The mu- 
tual affection of those who receive it is confirmed and sanctified; (2), 
Strength is given them to preserve inviolable fidelity to one another, 
and bear with patience the ills of life. For as soon as a man is 
married, he is no longer free as when single; no longer absolute 
master of his will, his time, his goods, his person, but he is in a 
measure dependent on the will of his wife; he wears the yoke, "for 
marriage," as St. Ambrose says, " is a yoke, a double yoke which rests 
on the neck of both husband and wife, obliging them to pull to- 
gether." To this is added many trials such as ill health, the faults 
and failings of the other, which must be borne with; troubles with 
the children, etc. Finally grace is given to discharge the most 
important duty of all, that of bringing up their children in the fear 
and love of God. " Unhappy those," says Pope Gregory XVI., " who 
enter upon the married state from merely earthly motives, or for 
Kev^ual gratification, and do not think of the graces and mysteries 
which this sacrament confers and represents." 



654 T7ie Means of Grace. 



Impediments to Matrimony, 

A marriage can only be concluded in the absence of all im- 
pediments to it. The impediments may be such as nullify mar- 
riage, or such as render it unlawful. 

1. Those that render marriage null or invalid, are: Coer- 
cion, defect of age, consanguinity, and affinity, a previous mar- 
riage tie still existing, the greater degrees of Holy Orders, sol- 
emn vows, the prohibition concerning the marriage of Catholics 
with unbaptized persons. 

Coercion: If undue stress is brought to bear on a man, if he is 
forced into marrying some one against his will by threats of per- 
sonal injury, or fear of being disinherited, his marriage is invalid- 
Defect of age : Boys under fourteen, girls under twelve cannot enter 
into wedlock. Consanguinity: A Papal dispensation is required 
for the marriage of first cousins; in the case of more remote re- 
lationship an episcopal dispensation is sufiicient. The voice of na- 
ture condemns the union of persons nearly related to one another, 
and their offspring are not unfrequently physically or mentally af- 
flicted. Aifinity is the result of a previous marriage; the survivor 
cannot espous/e the blood-relations of the deceased party; that is, a 
man cannot marry the mother, sister, or daughter (by a former hus- 
band) of his deceased wife, and vice versa. But no affinity exists 
between the blood-relations of the several parties; for instance, a 
man may marry the sister of his brother's wife. Previous marriage : 
It has already been explained that one of the parties to a marriage 
cannot marry again during the lifetime of the other. Should a 
woman, believing her husband to be dead, have married again, she 
must immediately leave her second husband, if she discover the 
first to be still living. Holy Orders and religious vows : Clerics who 
have received deacon's or subdeacon's orders, and monks and nuns 
who have taken a vow of celibacy, cannot enter upon the married 
state. Difference of creed: A Christian cannot, without a dis- 
pensation from the Holy See, be married to a Jew, a Mohammedan, 
or any other unbeliever. There are besides, impediments of a purely 
ecclesiastical nature, such as spiritual affinity, contracted in Bap- 
tism. These, however, are not recognized by the State, and therefore 
the Church readily grants a dispensation if required. 

2. The impediments that render marriage unlawful, are: 
The prohibition in regard to certain times, diversity of re- 
ligious belief, simple vows, complete ignorance of religious 
truth. 

The times when marriages cannot be celebrated are from the 
beginning of Advent until Christmas Day, and from Ash Wednesday 
until Easter Sunday (see the fifth precept of the Church). Diversity 
of religious belief: Marriages between Catholics and non-Catholics 
(Protestants, Old Catholics, non-uniate Greeks), can only be per- 



The Sacraments, 655 

mitted under certain conditions. Betrothed: Any one who has 
pledged his troth to one person cannot marry another until the 
previous engagement is broken off. Simple vows: Vows which are 
not solemn, vows of perpetual chastity, of celibacy; the vow to enter 
a religious Order or become a priest, are a hindrance to marriage. 
Ignorance of religious truth: Those who are about to marry must, 
if they are ignorant of the fundamental truths of religion, place 
themselves under instruction for some time previously, otherwise 
they will be unable to teach their children the elements of the Chris- 
tian religion. Hence it is usual for the priest to question those who 
announce to him their purpose of marrying, about the truths of 
religion, and if necessary instruct them in the duties and obliga- 
ti' >ns of the married state. 

3. Impediments of a purely civil nature, such as minority, 
military service, recent widowhood. 

In some States minors cannot marry without the consent of their 
father, or if he be dead, of the magistrate. Soldiers, the term of 
whose military service has not expired, must have the sanction of 
the government officials ; widows and widowers should allow a certain 
interval to elapse before concluding a second matrimonial alliance. 
The civil regulations in regard to matrimony must be observed, not 
from fear of the penaltiec incurred by violating them, but for God's 
sake, since the secular powers are ordained of God (Rom. xiii. 1). 
This rule would not hold good if the decrees of the legislature were 
opposed to the commandments of God. 

4. The ecclesiastical authorities are accustomed to dispense 
from matrimonial impediments where good reasons exist; the 
secular authorities do likewise. 

The Pope alone can dispense from some impediments, such as 
near blood-relationship, or affinity by marriage; from others the 
bishop can grant dispensations, either in virtue of his office, or em- 
powered by the Holy See. There are some natural impediments from 
which not even the Supreme Pontiff can grant a dispensation; nor 
is one ever granted to step-fathers and step-daughters, to fathers- 
in-law and daughters-in-law. Very rarely can a dispensation be 
obtained from solemn vows, or the greater Orders; nor in the case 
of one party being unbaptized, of spiritual affinity contracted in 
Baptism, or in the relations of uncle and niece, aunt and nephew. 
Purely ecclesiastical impediments allow much more readily of a dis- 
pensation. 

5. If a marriage to which any impediment rendering it in- 
valid exists, should have been contracted, it must either be dis- 
solved, or the impediment must be removed by means of a dis- 
pensation, and the ceremony performed over again. 

If the invalidity of the marriage is known publicly, the nuptial 
contract must be renewed in the church, in presence of the parish 
priest and two witnesses; if not, it can be renewed privately. If 
one only of the parties to the marriage is aware of the impediment. 



656 The Means of Grace, 

and if the other, should it come to his knowledge, w^ould make use 
of it to dissolve the marriage, or if it would destroy the conjugal hap- 
piness of both, the Pope has power to dispense from the renewal of the 
matrimonial contract, and declare the union valid. It is advisable, 
in order to bring to light any impediments that may exist to their 
marriage, that the parties intending to be united in wedlock should 
be subjected to an interrogation by the clergyman in presence of two 
witnesses. It is a grievous sin on the part of betrothed persons wil- 
fully to conceal any impediment which would annul their marriage. 
It is for the sake of ascertaining whether any such hindrances exist 
that the banns of marriage are published three times in the church. 

The Celehration of Matrimony. 

1. Marriage should be preceded by betrothal, publication of 
banns, and reception of Penance and Communion. 

1. Betrothal consists in this : An unmarried man and an un- 
married woman, after due reflection, pledge their troth to one an- 
other, promising each to marry the other at the time agreed upon 
between them. Such engagement to be considered valid and pro- 
duce canonical effects must have been contracted in writing signed 
by both the parties, and by either the parish priest or the Ordinary 
of the diocese or at least by two witnesses. "Decree Ne Temere." 
Still there is neither necessity nor obligation to enter into formal en- 
gagement before marriage, though it should be encouraged, espe- 
cially in cases where hasty alliances are feared. 

Eash and hasty engagements always turn out badly, therefore 
young people should not take this step without mature deliberation. 
They ought also to ask advice of their parents, or trusted friends. 
Listen to the exhortations of Holy Scripture: "My son, do thou 
nothing without counsel, and thou shall not repent what thou hast 
done" (Ecclus. xxxii. 24). They ought also to make it a subject of 
prayer, for a prudent wife is properly from the Lord (Pro v. xix. 14). 
A matter so important as the tying of the nuptial knot, which can 
never be unloosed, must not be done without prayer. In making 
choice of a partner for life, advantages of wealth, high birth, and 
the like, ought not to be as much considered as virtue and piety. The 
fear of God, the love of virtue, are the best marriage portion for 
Christians; for a man who does not love God will not love his wife. 
" Let him who desires happiness in the married state," says St. 
Augustine, " not choose for his bride one who has a large dowry, but 
one who is proficient in virtue; let him look to the beauty of the 
heart, to the nobility of a pure life." Personal beauty, if not accom- 
panied by interior loveliness, may captivate for a time, but its power 
is not lasting. Yet no man is to be blamed who has an eye to such 
attractions in his wife as beauty, wealth, and rank, for these in no 
wise interfere with the sanctity of the marriage bond. A virtuous 
man will surely have a partner worthy of him. A good wife is the 
portion of those that fear God, and is given to a man for his good 
deeds (Ecclus. xxvi. 3). During the interval between the betrothal 
and the conclusion of the marriage, the affianced parties ought seri- 
ously to reflect upon the step they are about to take, and make the 
best possible preparation for wedded life. Let them avoid all associa- 
tion on familiar terms with other suitors, and conduct themselves in 



The Sacraments, 657 

general with great decorum; the holy Synod exhorts the bridegroom 
and bride not to live in the same house until they have received the 
sacerdotal benediction which is given in the Church (Council of 
Trent, 24, 1). "Happy the young men and maidens," says St. John 
Chrysostom, " who come to the nuptial altar with a pure heart ! How 
true will be their mutual love! how sincere their mutual esteem! 
how firm their mutual friendship! how tenderly will that man 
cherish his wife who has never bestowed his affections on another ! " 
Those who have formed illicit connections before marriage will 
quickly tire of one another, their love will change to hatred. Those 
who are betrothed ought to acknowledge frankly to one another, with- 
out attempt at concealment or misrepresentation, any circumstances 
which it may be advisable or necessary to make known before the 
marriage is consummated. Those who resort to deception or false- 
hood only prepare for themselves annoyance, embitterment, misery in 
the future. If after betrothal, the conviction is borne in on either of 
the affianced parties that their union will not be productive of happi- 
ness, let the engagement be broken off by mutual consent; moreover 
one party is warranted in withdrawing from the contract if the other 
should be found guilty of any grave delinquency, such as breach of 
promise, treachery, theft, or the like; or if his circumstances should 
be altered by any unforeseen event of importance, such as the com- 
plete loss of property, severe illness, etc. 

2. The publication of banns is as follows: The names of 
the contracting parties between whom the marriage is to be con- 
cluded, shall be announced publicly three times in the parish 
church during the solemnization of Mass on three successive 
Sundays or festival days (Council of Trent, 24, 1). 

The name, calling, birthplace and place of residence of the affi- 
anced couple are proclaimed at the publication of their banns. The 
purpose of the announcement is to ascertain whether any impediment 
exists to their lawful union, and to announce to the parishioners the 
intended nuptials, that no scandal may be caused by their cohabita- 
tion. The marriage must on no account take place until after the day 
of the third announcement, but if it is not celebrated within six 
months of that time, the publication of the banns must be repeated. 
Only in exceptional cases is the publication of banns to be omitted, 
and the omission must be sanctioned by the bishop of the diocese. 

3. It is also enjoined on persons intending to marry to ap- 
proach the Sacraments of Penance and of the Altar, because it 
is indispensable that they should be in a state of grace, in order 
to participate in the graces conferred in the Sacrament of Matri- 
mony. 

All who are about to marry are exhorted, at least three days before 
the consummation of their marriage carefully to confess their sins 
and receive devoutly the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar (Council 
of Trent, 24, 1). The confession should be general, embracing the 
whole life, because it will then have the effect of awakening greater 



658 The Means of Grace, 

contrition, and of setting the conscience more fully at rest. Our 
Lord, Who condescended to be present at the marriage at Cana, must 
also be invited to come to the bridgroom and bride, to sanctify them, 
and bestow His grace and blessing on their nuptials. Happy those 
who prepare a fitting dwelling in their heart for the divine Guest! 
Without presumption on their part, they may hope that He vv^ill re- 
main with them until death, and impart to them the gift of His grace 
in abundant measure. But those who do not approach the sacraments 
worthily, and enter upon the matrimonial state in mortal sin, deprive 
themselves of grace, and call down on themselves the curse of God. 
They who thus act are like warriors going to the fight without armor 
and without arms. 

2. The Church expressly commands that the marriage of a 
Catholic to be valid must he contracted before the parish priest or 
the Ordinary of the place or a priest delegated by either of these 
and at least two witnesses. 

The decree to this effect was first issued by the Council of Trent, 
and with some slight modification was again promulgated and made 
binding for Catholics the world over after Easter Sunday, 1908, by 
Pope Pius X. The marriage ceremony must therefore be a public and 
an ecclesiastical ceremony. In early times it took place in presence of 
the bishop. St. Ignatius, Bishop of Antioch, says: ^1t is right that 
affianced persons should conclude their nuptials only with the knowl- 
edge and sanction of the bishop, that thus their union may be in ac- 
cordance with the will of God." "It was God," says St. Francis of 
Sales, "Who gave Eve to Adam, and He it is Who must bind the mar- 
riage bond." Those, therefore, whether they be practical or fallen- 
away Catholics, who contract marriage with a Catholic or a non- 
Catholic before a minister or a civil magistrate or otherwise than be- 
fore the parish priest or Ordinary or their priest delegate except when 
not possible and at least two witnesses, contract no marriage at all. 

3. Marriages are, as a rule, celebrated in the forenoon, in the 
house of God, with solemn ceremonies, and Mass is usually said at 
the time. 

Entrance into the state of matrimony is an event of great moment, 
one which influences the whole life. St. Paul terms matrimony " a 
great sacrament." Hence the affianced couple ought to conduct 
themselves with the utmost reverence, and not hasten out of the 
church the moment the ceremony is ended, but remain a while kneel- 
ing before the altar to make their thanksgiving. Thus Tertullian 
declares that the early Christians sealed their marriage contract 
with prayers, and ratified it with the holy sacrifice. In the missal a 
special Mass pro sponso et sponsa, is provided. For the celebration 
of nuptials in secret, in the presence of trusted witnesses only, the 
episcopal sanction must be obtained, and also for the celebration of 
marriage in the afternoon. 

The ceremonial for the celebration of matrimony is signifi- 
cant of the duties of the married and of the graces in which 
they participate. 



The Sacraments. 659 

The bride usually comes to the altar wearing a wreath, which is 
emblematical of the victory she has won in the preservation of her 
innocence. The bridegroom stands on the right of the altar, the bride 
upon the left, the witnesses stand behind them. The priest then asks 
each separately if with their free will and consent they enter into 
wedlock, and on their answering in the affirmative with an audible 
voice, they join hands, each holding the right hand of the other (to 
confirm their promise as by an oath) ; they pledge their troth, re- 
peating the formula after the priest, in which they each promise 
separately to have and to hold the other for better, for worse, for 
richer, for poorer, in sickness and in health, till death do part them. 
The priest then placing his stole round their joined hands (to indicate 
the indissolubility of the nuptial tie), unites them in the name of the 
Holy Trinity, and sprinkles them with holy water. This done, the 
bridegroom places upon the book the ring, which the priest blesses 
and gives back to the bridegroom, who places it on the thumb of the 
bride, saying: "In the name of the Father;" then on the second 
finger, saying : " and of the Son ;" then on the third, saying : " and 
of the Holy Ghost ;" lastly on the fourth, saying : " Amen." After 
this, some prayers are recited over the newly married couple, and if 
the nuptial benediction is to be given. Mass is said, at which it is 
usual for them to communicate. In conclusion the solemn benedic- 
tion is given, in which peace, happiness, long life, are besought for 
them. On their return home, a wedding-feast is prepared. In this 
there is nothing blameworthy; we know that Our Lord honored such 
a festivity with His presence. The newly-married should, however, 
be careful to spend the day in such a manner as not to lose the bless- 
ing which they received in the morning, as they would do were they 
to profane it by dissipation or sinful diversions. 



The Duties of the Married, 

The following are the duties incumbent on married persons: 
1. It is the duty of the wife to obey her husband, as the man 
is the head of the family, the representative of God. 

That the man is superior to the woman is shown by the fact that 
he was created first, and the woman was only created of his flesh, 
and as a helper for him (1 Cor. xi. 9). The man being the head 
of the family, the woman is subservient to him, as the members of 
the body are to the head. The Apostle says : " As the Church is sub- 
ject to Christ, so also let the wife be to the husband in all things" 
(Eph. V. 24). The woman is commanded to cover her head in the 
church, to indicate that she is under the dominion of the man ; whereas 
the man uncovers his head, because there is no one over him but 
God (1 Cor. xi. 10). The wife ought to fear her husband (Eph. v. 
33), that is show him the deference due to him. After the Fall God 
ordained that the woman should be under her husband's power, and 
should yield him obedience (Gen. iii. 16), because Eve lusted after 
power, and ate the apple first. The husband therefore has every 
right to rule his wife, but he ought to rule with kindness, gentleness 



660 The Means of Grace, 

and leniency, for she is in one sense his equal, having been made 
out of flesh taken from his side. Therefore St. Ambrose bids the 
husband remember that his wife is not to be treated as a servant, 
that he must not make his authority felt to be a burden. Besides the 
woman, being the weaker, can claim to be gently treated (1 Pet. iii. 
7). It is more shame for the man than for the woman, if he resorts 
to blows to enforce his authority. As the representative of God, the 
husband has the right of controlling the household. The angel did 
not appear to Mary, but to Joseph, when the flight to Egypt was to 
be made, because the husband's duty is to rule and govern. 

2. The husband and wife owe to each other love, fidelity, 
and mutual aid in all circumstances of their life. 

Husbands ought to love their wives as Christ loves the Church 
(Eph. V. 25), as their own bodies (v. 28), as themselves (v. 33). 
The love of husband and wife ought not to be a purely natural 
love, like that of the lower animals, nor a purely human love, like 
that of the heathen, but a holy and supernatural affection, like that 
of Christ for the Church, and of the Church for Christ. Hence they 
ought each to bear with the infirmities of the other patiently and 
indulgently, or generously close their eyes to them. An example 
of this is given by the Greek philosopher Socrates, whose wife was a 
perfect virago. When she stormed at him, he took no more notice 
of it than of the rattling of a passing vehicle. One day when he 
was seated before the house v/ith his scholars, from a window above 
she rated him soundly, and finally threw a jug of water over him. 
Socrates rose and changed his place, remarking with a smile : " I 
might have known that the storm would have ended with a thiuider 
shower." The wife will influence her husband for good far more 
effectually by silence, meekness and prayer than by reproaches, St. 
Augustine tells us that his mother did more for the conversion of 
her husband Patricius by the saintliness of her life, than by her 
words. Dissensions between husband and wife ruin their happiness ; 
without peace at home nothing pleases, even amid all the luxuries 
wealth can command. Married people owe fidelity to one another 
(Heb. xiii. 4). They ought scrupulously to guard against every 
appearance of unfaithfulness, and avoid familiar intercourse with 
persons of the other sex. Eor where jealousy enters, all conjugal 
happiness is at an end. St. John Chrysostom is of opinion that the 
direst poverty, the most incurable malady, fire even and sword, are 
lesser evils than jealousy. The Jews used to stone the unfaithful 
husband or wife, for they considered adultery a no less heinous 
crime than murder (Lev. xx. 10). St. Paul declares everlasting 
damnation to be the portion of adulterers (Eph. v. 5). The married 
must not defraud one another of their conjugal rights (1 Cor. vii. 
1-5), but they must abstain from excesses inconsistent with the sanc- 
tity of their state (Tob. vi. 17), and only keep in view the object 
indicated by the angel to Tobias (v. 22), otherwise the devil will 
prevail over them (v. 16). To the duty of mutual aid it appertains 
that husband and wife should live together, and that neither the 
one nor the other should avail himself or herself, if contrarieties or 
calamities overtake them, of any pretext to leave the other ; they are 
bound to assist each other in the training of their children, to sue- 



The Sacraments, 661 

cor each other in illness, to aid each other to bear more easily the 
ills of life, and to perform their religious duties with greater facility. 
Eve was created for the sole purpose of helping Adam ; for God said : 
*' It is not good for man to be alone, let us make him a help like 
unto himself" (Gen. ii. 18). It is, however, a sad misfortune when 
the wife is not a support but a cross to her husband; when instead 
of lightening his burdens, she only adds to their weight. Almighty 
God declares that a really good woman is a treasure of inestimable 
price (Prov. xxxi. 10), far above the most costly jewels. Jewels 
serve to adorn their owner, and that which is to him a brilliant orna- 
ment in the day of prosperity, is to him in adversity a timely aid. 
So a good wife is in herself a source of riches, a valuable jewel 
which retains its worth amid all the vicissitudes of life. 

3. It is the duty of both husband and wife to provide for 
their children, and train them in the fear and love of God. 

, Children are no more the property of their parents than riches 
are; they are a gift from God (Ps. cxxvi. 3). They are His crea- 
tures, destined to be happy with Him forever; they are the children 
of their Father in heaven, and are only given in trust by Him to their 
parents, to be brought up in His service. Thus parents are only 
servants, bound to carry out the will of God in regard to their off- 
spring. 

The duties which parents have to discharge towards their 
children are these: They have to safeguard them from every- 
thing which would be prejudicial to their health; they have to 
supply them with their daily sustenance; they have also to pro- 
vide for their future. 

It is the duty of parents to deny themselves everything which 
might prove injurious to the health of their children. They must 
refrain from giving way to their passions, or indulging in excesses, 
lest they transmit a heritage of disease or sin to their offspring. 
Like father, like child, the proverb says. Parents ought not to give 
themselves up to the pursuit of pleasiu*e and amusements, to the 
neglect of their young children. Let them remember how distressed 
Mary and Joseph were when the Child Jesus was lost, how for three 
days they sought Him, sorrowing (Luke ii. 48). Let them learn a 
lesson from the birds; they do not leave the nest until their young 
are fully fledged, they are indefatigable in supplying them with food, 
they teach them to fly. Parents ought to work for the daily bread 
of their family; even wild beasts take the utmost care of their young, 
yet some parents are, as Holy Scripture says, " cruel as the ostrich 
in the desert" (Lam. iv. 3), which lays her eggs in the sand and 
heeds them no more. " Children ought not to lay up for the 
parents, but the parents for the children " (2 Cor. xii. 14). They 
ought to provide for their children's future by laying by a certain 
amount of money to bequeath to them; by sending them to school; 
by fitting them to follow the calling most in accordance with their 
inclinations and capabilities; above all by training them in the fear 
of God, which is the surest means of promoting their temporal as well 



662 Hie Means of Grace. 

as their spiritual welfare; (David declares: "I have been young and 
now am old, and I have not seen the just forsaken, nor his seed 
begging bread," Ps. xxxvi. 25); finally it is the bounden duty of 
parents to pray for their children, and thus call down on them the 
blessing of God. Job offered holocausts daily for every one of his 
children, lest perchance they should have sinned against God (Job 
i. 5). St. Monica prayed fervently for her son, and with the hap- 
piest results. " Parents," says St. Francis of Sales, " ought often to 
speak of God to their children, but yet more often to speak to God 
of their children." 

In regard to the bringing up of their children it is the duty 
of parents to have them baptized immediately after their birth, 
to give them their first religious teaching, to set them a good 
example in all respects, and to treat them with kindness rather 
than severity. 

St. Charles Borromeo says that training children means bringing 
them to Christ. Parents ought to have their new-born infant bap- 
tized as soon as possible; to defer baptism for more than ten days 
after the birth of a child, without good reason, is a sin. They ought 
to instruct their children early in the fundamental truths of religion ; 
to teach them that there is a God in heaven ; that He knows and sees 
everything, that if we obey Him, He will take us to Himself in 
heaven, etc. They should beware of frightening their children by 
threats of hell and of the devil, lest they inspire them with a repul- 
sion for religion, also of allowing them to imbibe false ideas, for if 
later on they find they have been deluded, they will not believe any- 
thing. Parents must instruct their children in the law of God, as 
Tobias did. He taught his son from his infancy to fear God and to 
abstain from sin (Tob. i. 10), and when he thought his death was 
near, he gave him godly admonitions (Tob. iv.). They should en- 
deavor to stifle evil propensities in their children, and bring them up 
in the discipline and correction of the Lord (Eph. vi. 4). They 
should teach them to pray, beginning with the sign of the cross and 
the invocation of the holy name, and proceeding to the Our Father, 
Hail Mary, and the Creed. The children's daily prayers should be 
very short, so as not to become wearisome to them Furthermore 
parents should set their children a good example. We all know how 
much more influential example is than precept, and that what is seen 
makes a far more lasting impression than what is heard. The actions 
of the father and mother are the lesson books of their children ; how 
careful should they therefore be not to let them see them do any- 
thing blameworthy, and also to warn the servants not to say or do 
anything in the presence of the children which they ought not to see 
or hear. For the imitative faculty is strong in children; they are 
sure to do what they see their elders do. Let parents remember Our 
Lord's words : " He that shall scandalize one of these little ones 
that believe in Me, it were better for him that a millstone should be 
hanged about his neck and that he should be drowned in the depth 
of the sea " (Matt, xviii. 6). Those who neglect this warning will have 
reason to tremble, for if the soul of the child is lost through the par- 
ents' fault, they will hear the voice of God saying: "I will require 



The Sacraments. 663 

his blood of thy hand " (Ezech. xxxiii. 8). In training their children 
parents should combine kindness and firmness. Too great severity 
is a fault ; iov rebukes and punishments are a medicine, which if ad- 
ministered too frequently or in too strong doses, does harm instead 
of good. It is not by incessant beating with the hammer that the 
goldsmith fashions the most elegant ornaments. To be always find- 
ing fault is a great mistake, but it is no less a one to let the chil- 
dren's wrong-doing pass unpunished, to pamper and spoil them 
through ill-regulated affection and false kindness. He that spareth 
the rod hateth his son (Prov. xiii. 24). " Give thy son his way, and 
he shall make thee afraid " (Ecclus. xxx. 9). To allow a child to have 
his own will in all things is highly reprehensible; he should be firmly, 
not sternly compelled to yield. 

Of all parental duties, that of training their children in the 
fear of God is the most important; for on the manner in which 
it is discharged the temporal and eternal happiness both of par- 
ents and children will depend. 

The education of their children ought to be for parents a matter 
of such moment, that nothing should grieve them so much as to see 
them turn out badly, or rejoice them so much as to see them walking 
in truth (2 John i. 4). The religious training of the child devolves 
principally on the mother, as his earliest years are spent at her knee. 
The father, engaged in the occupations of his calling, has little time 
and less inclination for the work of instruction. The father and 
mother supplement each other. The father, by his position of com- 
mand and force of character, represents the divine power and justice ; 
the mother, with her gentle kindness and tender love, represents the 
divine attributes of bounty and compassion. It is the part of the 
father to confirm with his paternal authority what the mother teaches, 
and enforce the orders she gives. The future happiness of the child 
depends upon the early training he receives; for, as a rule, what he 
is in his youth that he is in his old age. Just as out of a piece of 
soft w^ax one may model an angel or a devil, so it is with the charac- 
ter of a young child. The first impressions are always the most last- 
ing; they are never wholly effaced from the soul, any more than 
marks made in the bark of a young tree ever disappear; they do but 
widen with its growth. In later years the character cannot be 
moulded afresh ; as the sapling is bent, the tree is inclined. The land, 
if it is to yield a harvest in autumn, must be tilled in the early spring, 
not left uncultivated until the summer. The great majority of crim- 
inals in houses of correction are those whose training has been 
neglected in their childhood. Can it be supposed that if the souls of 
these culprits are lost, their parents are not to blame for it? Consider, O 
parents, what a responsibility rests upon your shoulders! Those who 
pay no heed to the bringing up of their children are more culpable 
than those who put them to death; for the latter only take the life 
of the body, whereas the former cause the destruction of the soul. 
Some parents are at great pains to amass wealth to bequeath to their 
children, but they do not care in the least how they are brought up. 
The temporal and eternal happiness of the parents also depends in 
a great measure on the training they give to their children. Those 



364 The Means of Grace. 

who bring them up badly are generally severely chastised by God in 
this world, and often it is their own children who are their scourge. 
By that wherein they have sinned, by that same they are punished. 
King David, through an exaggerated fondness for his son Absalom, 
did not correct him for his faults; and in after years he had cause 
bitterly to regret his weakness, when Absalom rebelled against him 
(2 Kings xviii.). Heli, the high priest, was too indulgent towards 
his wicked sons, and the chastisement foretold to him by God through 
the mouth of Samuel speedily overtook him; his two sons were slain 
in battle, and the old man, on hearing the sad tidings of Israel's de- 
feat, fell off his seat and died (1 Kings iv. 18). Nor can negligent 
parents expect to fare better in another world, for the Apostle com- 
pares them to unbelievers : " If any man have not care of his own, 
and especially those of his house, he hath denied the faith and is 
worse than an infidel" (1 Tim. v. 8). On the other hand, a rich re- 
ward is promised hereafter to those who have brought up their chil- 
dren well. The eternal felicity of a mother depends on the manner 
in which she has trained her offspring (1 Tim. ii. 15). The father of 
a good son will not be sorrowful at the approach of death, neither will 
he be confounded before his enemies (Ecclus. xxx. 5). Good parents 
who have conscientiously fulfilled their duties will, when they appear 
before God, be able to say : " Behold, those whom Thou gavest me I 
have kept, and none of them is lost" (John xvii. 12). 

Mixed Marriages. 

1. Mixed marriages, by which is understood the marriage of 
Catholics to non-Catholics, have always been disapproved of by the 
Church. 

(1), Because in such marriages the proper training of the 
children is a matter of great difficulty, if not altogether impos- 
sible; (2), Because such unions are productive of no concord, 
no true happiness; (3), Because the Catholic is in great danger 
of losing his or her faith; (4), And besides, the non-Catholic 
may at any time obtain a divorce, leave his or her Catholic 
partner, and contract another marriage. 

Even in the Old Testament mixed marri^ctges were prohibited ; the 
Jews were not permitted to make marriages with the Chanaanites 
(Deut. vii. 3), nor indeed with the Samaritans, although they kept 
the law of God and had the books of Moses, because of the heathen 
ceremonies they observed. In like manner in the present day the 
Church discourages the marriage of Catholics to non-Catholics, who, 
though they call themselves Christians, hold doctrines which are at 
variance with the teaching of Christ. The Church warns her chil- 
dren against such alliances, just as a loving father might warn his 
son against undertaking some journey which he knows will expose 
him to great perils. In early times parents who gave their daughter 
in marriage to a heretic were subjected to a five years' penance. The 
dangers attendant on mixed marriages are "^hese: The non-Catholic 



The Sacraments, 6b-5 

party, whether a Protestant or not a Christian, far from assisting in 
the education of the children, will be an obstacle to it, and will per- 
haps throw scorn and ridicule on Catholic faith and practice. And 
even if this is not the case, the example of the unbelieving parent 
will have the worst consequences for the children. And not unfre- 
quently it happens that the non-Catholic, urged by the ministers of 
his religion, or by his relatives, who represent that it will be pre- 
judicial to their temporal interests if his children are brought up as 
Catholics, yields to their persuasions, and departs from his promise 
that they should be so brought up. And what becomes of the chil- 
dren if their Catholic parent dies, and the other espouses a member 
of his or her own religion? A Catholic cannot do his children a 
more cruel wrong than by marrying one who is not of his own re- 
ligion. Moreover, true happiness can hardly exist in such a marriage, 
where there is not union on the most important of all matters. Heart- 
felt affection and confidence between husband and wife are scarcely 
possible if they differ on a point which is all-important, namely re- 
ligion. Mixed marriages are, moreover, fraught with no slight 
danger to the salvation of those who contract them. The wise and 
enlightened King Solomon took to himself heathen wives in his old 
age, and they prevailed over him so far, that from a worshipper of 
the true God he became an idolater, and allowed temples of the false 
gods to be erected in his kingdom. The influence of heretics who call 
themselves Christians is often more perilous than that of open un- 
believers. If reading heretical books is apt to mislead, how much 
more is continual and close contact with heretics to be dreaded ! Be- 
sides, we are far more ready to adopt the opinions of one to whom we 
are attached, for we are blinded by affection. The Holy Father de- 
clares that mixed marriages have the effect of obliterating the 
distinction between truth and error, and fostering the idea that all 
religions are equally good. Furthermore mixed marriages are most 
unfair for the Catholic party. The non-Catholic may at any time 
obtain a divorce and marry again; whereas the Catholic is bound not 
to take a second partner as long as the former lives. What an 
equivocal position is that of a divorced woman ! She is married, and 
yet she has no husband ; she has the mortification of seeing her right- 
ful husband with another wife, while she is condemned to live a 
lonely life, looked down upon perhaps by the world ; and worst of all, 
to be separated from some, if not all, of her children. Well then may 
the Church exhort Christian people to beware of entering into matri- 
mony with those who are aliens to the faith they hold ! 

2. The Church tolerates mixed marriages on three conditions: 

(1), Both parties must promise that their children shall be 
brought up as Catholics; (2), The Catholic must promise to en- 
deavor to bring the non-Catholic to the knowledge of the truth; 
(3), The non-Catholic must promise to allow the Catholic liberty 
for the free exercise of his or her religion. Without these three 
conditions the Church will not sanction a mixed marriage. 

By tolerating or permitting mixed marriages the Church does not 
approve them; on the contrary she strongly disapproves of them* 



666 The Means of Grace, 

and she insists so forcibly on the children being brought up in the 
Catholic faith, because this is the main object of matrimony. It has 
already been shown that the chief end of marriage is to train up 
children in the knowledge and fear of God; the aim of the Christian 
parent should rather be to leave behind him inheritors of the king- 
dom of heaven than heirs of his earthly possessions. Consequently 
it is the first duty of a Catholic, who has wedded one who does not 
hold the faith, to insure his child's salvation in as far as he can. 
How deeply is that parent to be commiserated who destroys the soul 
of her offspring, by allowing the poison of error to be instilled into 
its mind ! When the first glamour of an ill-regulated affection fades 
away, and conscience again makes its voice heard, the path of wedded 
life is beset with thorns. The birth of the first child, which ought to 
be an occasion of glad rejoicing, is a source of anxiety to the mother, 
for she fears that it will be taught to regard the true faith with hos- 
tility. How her conscience reproaches her! And each successive 
child, which ought to be welcomed as a blessing from the hand of God, 
is a fresh accuser, calling to mind her treachery. The Catholic party 
is also bound to bring the non-Catholic to the knowledge of the truth, 
not by coercion or persuasion, for proselytizing only adds to the 
number of nominal Catholics, not of the loyal children of the Church, 
and is abhorrent to the Catholic Church, who only desires the 
erring to be brought to her fold of their own free will, and through 
full conviction. Let them be won by prayer and good example : " Let 
the unbelieving husbands be won by the conversation of the wives " 
(1 Pet. iii. 1). If the Catholic wife is seen to be modest, yielding, 
patient, faithful, etc., the non-Catholic husband will be led to reflect, 
anl consider whether he may not judge of the tree by its fruits. At 
any rate he will gradually divest himself of all his former prejudices 
against our holy religion. He must not be pressed with arguments 
and instructions, but rather every word should be carefully avoided 
that might wound his susceptibilities. For those who are outside 
the Church are not to blame because they have not had the privilege 
of being born and brought up in the true faith. Furthermore the 
Catholic party must fearlessly observe his or her religious duties ; 
the other will respect such observance. A man who is not devoid of 
good feeling will have no wish to oppose the pious practices of his 
wife ; he will know himself to be a gainer, not a loser by them. Some- 
times Protestants assert that they agree with Catholics on the funda- 
mental truths of religion, and only differ in non-essentials; this is 
utterly false. What the Catholic holds most sacred, the Protestant 
despises; witness the holy sacrifice of the Mass, which Protestants 
regard as an act of idolatrous worship. In the face of differences 
so deep-rooted all idea of unity is a mockery. 

3. The Catholic who contracts a mixed marriage before a min- 
ister contracts no marriage at all, commits a mortal sin and cannot 
be admitted to the Sacraments. 

Catholics who act thus are declared to be guilty of mortal sin, 
because they sin through disobedience, by refusing to conform to the 
precepts of the Church ; they give great scandal, and deny the faith ; 
they turn their back upon the sacraments of the true Church and 



The Sacraments. QQI 

teceive the rites of an heretical sect. Thus they give the preference 
to a false Church, or at least allow its equality with the true one. 
They cannot be re-admitted to the sacraments unless they manifest 
gincere contrition on account of their sinful union, and are ready 
to comply with the requirements of the Church. Many a one takes 
a just view of his conduct on his death-bed. Conscience often slum- 
bers, like a volcano, which for long years shows no signs of activity, 
then suddenly bursts into flame; so conscience awakens at last, and 
the unhappy soul is consumed by the flames of remorse and despair. 
ISTo one who firmly believes the Catholic to be the only true and saving 
faith will be content to see his children brought up in soul-destroying 
error; and it may safely be affirmed, that in the majority of cases, 
those who contract mixed marriages sooner or later heartily regret 
the step they have taken. 



The Unmarried State, 

1. The unmarried state is better than the married, because 
those who do not marry have far more opportunity for attending 
to their spiritual welfare, and can attain a higher degree of glory 
hereafter. 

It is better and more blessed to remain in virginity or in celi- 
bacy than to be united in matrimony (Council of Trent, 24, 10). The 
state of virginity surpasses the married state in excellence as much 
as angels surpass men. It is as far above matrimony as the heavens 
are above the earth ; it is as much superior to it as the soul is to the 
body. Marriage is honorable, but virginity is far more honorable. 
Such is the opinion of the Fathers. The heathen entertained a 
great respect for those who voluntarily embraced a life of celibacy 
and chastity; witness the reverence shown by the Romans for the 
vestal virgins. The richer and nobler the bridegroom, the more a 
bride is congratulated upon her espousals. How much the more 
ought those to be deemed happy, who by the practice of chastity have 
chosen Christ for their Spouse; and for His sake, like St. Agnes of 
old, despised every earthly suitor, however wealthy and powerful. 
The unmarried are more free to study the concerns of their soul ; St. 
Paul says : " He that is without a wife is solicitous how he may please 
God; but he that is with a wife is solicitous how he may please his 
wife; and he is divided" (1 Cor. vii. 32-34). The unmarried also 
can attain a higher degree of glory. St. John beheld a multitude 
" before the throne, who sang a new canticle, that no man could say 
but those a hundred forty and four thousand; for they were virgins " 
(Apoc. xiv. 1-5). 

2. Our Lord when on earth commended the state of virginity 
both by precept and example. 

Our Lord says that there are some who renounce matrimony for 
the kingdom of heaven's sake, adding: "He that can take, let him 
take it" (Matt. xix. 12). St. Paul also says: "He that giveth his 
daughter in marriage doth well, but he that giveth her not doth 



668 The Means of Grace. 

better" (1 Cor. vii. 38). And again, speaking of widows, "more 
blessed shall she be if she so remain" (v. 40). The apostles did not 
marry, and many of the saints took vows of perpetual virginity; of 
this the greatest example is given us in the blessed Mother of God, 
as we learn from her own words to the angel (Luke i. 34) ; it is also 
the opinion of the Fathers that St. Joseph did the same. Some of 
the saints, especially in the early ages of the Church, endured the 
most agonizing tortures and a cruel death rather than break their 
vow of virginity. It is related of St. Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers, who 
before he received Holy Orders had been married and had a daugh- 
ter, that while he was in exile he received a letter from his daughter, 
telling him she was grown up, and was about to be married. He 
wrote in answer to say that he was soon returning home, and would 
bring the portrait of another suitor; she could compare the two and 
choose between them. On his arrival he gave her a crucifix, and 
exhorted her to consecrate herself to Christ by a vow of virginity. 
This she did, and shortly after died a holy death. Just before she 
expired her father said to her : " Behold your celestial Spouse ; He 
has come to take you to your eternal nuptials." In the pages of 
hagiology we read of many saints who, although married, led a life 
of chastity. 



in. THE SACKAMENTALS. 

Sacramentals are rites which have some outward resem- 
blance to the sacraments instituted by Christ, but which are not 
of divine institution. The name is applied both to the blessing or 
consecration given by the Church, and to the objects blessed or 
consecrated. 

Our Lord gave the apostles power over unclean spirits, to cast 
them out, and to heal all manner of diseases (Matt. x. 1). The 
Church makes use of this power; by means of her ministers she 
blesses or consecrates certain objects, praying that God would render 
these objects efficacious in banishing evil spirits and healing sick- 
nesses. That is to say, the priest implores the blessing of God the 
Father, for the averting of evils both corporal and spiritual. At the 
same time he makes use of visible signs, such as the sign of the 
cross, the holy water, the sacred oils, etc. A light is kindled, to 
signify the Saviour, the Light of the world. Incense if often used, 
to indicate that the sacramentals must be employed with pious dis- 
positions. Sacramentals are called by this name because of their 
resemblance to a sacrament. In both there is a sign and form of 
words which possess a supernatural power and represent the invisible 
grace. But the sacraments have incomparably more power than 
the sacramentals; the latter are not necessary to salvation, whereas 
the former are. Sacramentals are means of grace of the second 
class. 

The blessing consists in this, that the minister of the Church 
invokes the divine benediction upon certain persons or things. 



The Sacramentals, 669 

The divine blessing is quite distinct from divine grace. The 
latter has the effect of beautifying the soul, the former averts earthly 
ills and promotes temporal welfare. Thus objects are only blessed 
for the sake of the persons who use them, or on whose behalf they 
are used. 

The following are the benedictions which are customarily 
conferred on persons: The blessing at the conclusion of the 
Mass, the blessing given to communicants, the nuptial benedic- 
tion, the benediction after childbirth, the last blessing, and the 
blessing of the remains of the departed. 

It is usual for women after childbirth to go to the church to 
implore the blessing of God upon their child, and receive the bene- 
diction of the priest. This custom was observed in the Old Testa- 
ment; every mother had to present herself in the Temple with her 
infant forty days after its birth if it was a boy, and eighty if it was 
a girl. The Mother of God herself conformed to this rule. 

Exorcism belongs also to the blessings conferred on persons. 
It consists in commanding the devil to depart, in the name of 
Christ, from possessed persons or things. 

The evil effects of original sin rest upon every creature (Rom. 
viii. 20), and upon the whole of inanimate nature (Gen. iii. 17). It 
is this that renders the blessings of the Church and her exorcisms 
necessary. The power granted by Our Lord to His apostles to cast 
out unclean spirits is employed in the exorcism at baptism and when 
holy water is blessed. Cases of possession or obsession rarely occur 
in the present day; the exorcism can only be performed by a bishop, 
or by a priest with his permission. Only one who is himself ani- 
mated by a firm faith and whose life is pure, can exorcise, and even 
then the exorcism will be of no avail if the person exorcised per- 
severes in his evil dispositions, or if God wills that His elect should 
be delivered into the power of the devil for their sanctification. 
For the sacramentals do not remove afflictions which are for the 
spiritual welfare of the individual. 

1. Consecration by the Church consists in this: That the 
ecclesiastic empowered for this purpose sets apart some person or 
some object, and dedicates him or it to the exclusive service of God. 

The persons whom it is customary to consecrate in a solemn 
manner are: The Pope, kings and emperors, abbots, monks, and 
nuns. 

The consecration of priests, be it remembered, is a sacrament. 

The things which it is customary to bless are: Holy water, 
the water to be use<l in Baptism (this is blessed on Holy Satur- 
day and on the eve of Pentecost); candles (on the Purification, 



670 The Means of Grace, 

and the Paschal candle at Easter) ; ashes (on Ash Wednesday) ; 
palms (on Palm Sunday); the holy oils (on Maundy Thursda}^ 
in the cathedrals), besides crosses, images, rosaries, medals, ban- 
ners; places also are blessed, such as churches, chapels, altars, 
cemeteries. 

The Church blesses everything which appertains to divine service. 

2. Our Lord sanctioned the use of sacramentals, but the ritej 
themselves are an institution of the Church. 

Our Lord while on earth blessed the loaves and fishes (Matt, 
xiv. 19) ; He blessed the young children wbo were brought to Him 
(Mark x. 16) ; He gave His blessing to His apostles before His ascen- 
sion (Luke xxiv. 50). We read moreover that God blessed our first 
parents (Gen. i. 28) ; that ISToe blessed his two sons (Gen. ix. 26) ; 
Isaac blessed Jacob (Gen. xxvii. 27) ; Jacob when dying blessed his 
twelve sons (Gen. xlix. 28) ; and Moses the tribes of Israel (Deut. 
xxxiii.). Aaron and the priests that succeeded him gave their bene- 
diction every morning and evening to the people in the outer court 
of the Temple; stretching forth their hands over them, they blessed 
them, invoking the name of the Lord three times over the children 
of Israel (Numb. vi. 23). 

The ceremony of blessing or consecrating is generally per- 
formed by the priests. 

Several acts of consecration appertain to the episcopal office, 
and may only be performed by a priest with the authorization of the 
bishop, as for instance, the dedication of churches and altars, the 
blessing of bells, chalices, etc. The laity can bless, but not in the 
name of the Church ; parents frequently bless their children, and the 
more pious they are, the more effect has their blessing. 

3. The use of blessed or consecrated objects is profitable; for 
if used with pious dispositions, they increase our fear and love of 
God, remit venial sins, and preserve us from many temptations 
and from bodily harm ; excepting such temptations and ills of the 
body as are for our spiritual welfare. 

The sacramentals remit venial sin, and deliver us from some of 
the evil consequences of sin. They help us in the hour of temptation ; 
St. Teresa cannot say enough concerning the power of holy water 
to drive away the devil. They are also of use in bodily ills and in- 
firmities; the apostles anointed with oil many who were sick and 
healed them (Mark vi. 13). They are thus a remedy and a shield. 
Is it superstition on the part of the soldier who carries with him a 
blessed crucifix when he goes to battle, hoping that by God's mercy 
it may be his protection? By no means. Nor is the sick man to 
blame if he sprinkles himself frequently with holy water, thinking 
thus to accelerate his recovery. But we must beware of trusting too 
much to the efficacy of sacramentals; or imputing to them more 
power than the prayer of the Church imparts to them ; they are not 



Prayer, 671 

like the sacraments. The sacraments confer upon those who receive 
them the grace of the Holy Spirit; the sacramentals only purify 
the soul, and render it more fit for the reception of sanctifying grace. 
The sacramentals derive all their power from the prayers of the 
Church ; it is in the name of the Church that the priest blesses them. 
The petitions of the Church have immense power, for they are united 
to the prayer of Our Lord and to the supplications of the saints. 

4. The sacramentals can, however, only be used with profit 
by persoii.< who are free from mortal sin, and who use them in 
a spirit of faith and confidence. 

The effect of the sacramentals depends upon the worthiness and 
the pious dispositions of the individual who uses them. Those who 
live in mortal sin will derive no more benefit from wearing some 
blessed object, or from the use of holy water, than the Jews did from 
bringing the Ark of the Covenant on to the field of battle, when they 
had incurred God's wrath by their sins (1 Kings iv.). Nor will they 
profit one who places no confidence in them, any more than prayer 
profits the man who does not ask in faith, nothing wavering (Jas. i. 
6). Our Lord abstained from working many miracles in some places, 
because of the unbelief of the inhabitants (Matt. xiii. 18). Remem- 
ber what He said to the woman who touched Him : " Thy faith hath 
made thee whole" (Mark v. 34). We find that devout Christians 
always reverence sacramentals and use them diligently. They wear 
blessed objects on their person, they frequently take holy water, they 
like to say their prayers in consecrated places, knowing that prayer 
offered in a church is more efficacious than what is offered elsewhere. 
In times of temptation or of sickness above all, we should have re- 
course to the assistance afforded by sacramentals. 



IV. PRAYER. 
1. TEE NATURE OF PRAYER. 

1. Prayer is the elevation of the heart to God. 

When we are engaged in conversation with any one, we forget 
everything else. This is what we should do when we talk with God, 
that is, when we pray. In prayer, we must direct all the powers of the 
soul to God; the understanding, for we must think of Him; the 
memory, for we must forget the things of earth; the affections, for 
we must delight in Him. The mere thought of God is no prayer ; the 
devils think of God, but they do not pray to Him. Let Our Lord's 
ascension be to us a symbol of prayer; so are the clouds of incense 
that float upwards on the air ; the lark that soars aloft as she warbles 
her song. It is recorded of some saints that the elevation of their 
souls in prayer was made manifest by external signs ; they were raised 
from the ground, they were surrounded by a supernatural radiance. 
St. John Chrysostom says that to be permitted to talk with his 
Creator and hold familiar intercourse with Him, is the greatest honor 



672 The Means of Grace. 

and privilege mortal man can enjoy. Who can fail to admire and 
wonder at the gracious condescension of the Most High, that He not 
only permits, but commands us to converse with Him? 

When we pray it is customary to employ external signs of 
devotion, such as kneeling down, folding the hands, striking the 
breast, etc. 

By kneeling down we acknowledge our own littleness in God's 
sight; by folding our hands, we signify that we are helpless, bound 
by the chains of sin ; by striking the breast, that we are deserving of 
stripes. Sometimes we prostrate ourselves upon the ground, to testify 
our sense of our nothingness before God ; this Judith did, before she 
went into the enemy's camp (Judith x. 1). Our Lord did the same on 
Mount Olivet (Matt. xxvi. 39). So does the priest at the foot of the 
altar on Good Friday. When prayer is very fervent and importunate, 
the hands are lifted up and the arms outstretched; thus Moses .prayed 
during the battle between the Israelites and the Amalekites (Exod. 
xvii. 12), and Solomon at the dedication of the Temple (2 Par. v. 12). 
The priest often does the same during the celebration of holy Mass. 
The Jews of old turned their faces towards the Temple at the time of 
prayer; we may do likewise. David worshipped towards the holy 
Temple (Ps. v. 8), and so did Daniel (Dan. vi. 10). God needs not 
these outward signs, for He reads the heart of man; but we thereby 
excite ourselves to greater activity and more humility in prayer. 
These postures are not a necessary adjunct to prayer; they may be 
dispensed with on account of weariness, sickness, or in the presence 
of others. One may even pray while walking abroad, as pilgrims do, 
or if we happen to hear the Angelus rung while we are in the streets 
of a town. 

2. We may pray either in spirit only, or with the lips as well. 

One may raise one's heart in prayer to God without those who are 
around us perceiving it ; this is mental prayer. Vocal prayer is both 
useful and necessary. Man consists of soul and body, and with both 
he must yield homage to God (Osee xiv. 3). It is, moreover, natural 
to express in words the thoughts of the heart (Matt. xii. 34). In the 
absence of vocal prayer the Christian religion would lack its main- 
stay. Vocal prayer quickens the attention of the mind, and inflames 
the devotion of the suppliant himself as well as of others. Vocal 
or common prayer is more efficacious with God ; Our Lord says : 
" Whatsoever they shall ask, it shall be done unto them by My Father 
Who is in heaven" (Matt, xviii. 19). 

Prayer with the lips only, and not with the spirit, is worth- 
less. 

Our Lord complains of the Pharisees : " This people honoreth Me 
with their lips, but their heart is far from Me "_ (Matt. xv. 8). St. 
Augustine says many call upon God with the voice of the body, not 
with the voice of the soul. All attitudes and gestures too, which are 
merely formal have no value. God is a spirit, and they that adore 
Him must adore Him in spirit and in truth (John iv. 24). 



Prayer, o73 

We can also pray with the voice of song. 

HjTTins and spiritual canticles are an excellent form of prayer, 
which the Apostle admonishes the Colossians to practise. It is a 
powerful factor in raising the heart to God. St. Ambrose and Pope 
Gregory the Great did much to promote the custom of singing in 
churches. 

In our prayers we may either make use of the authorized 
forms of prayer, or address God in the words our own heart will 
suggest. 

It is well to recite the usual well-known prayers, such as the Our 
Father and Hail Mary, but not to keep slavishly to the use of forms. 
We should speak to God from time to time in our own words; He 
loves to hear us address Him with filial confidence. The three chil- 
dren in the furnace of Babylon cried to Him in their own language. 
There is no need to employ well-turned phrases; how much better 
to speak to God simply and straightforwardly. The plainest language 
is the language of the heart, and it is not the words which God re- 
gards, but the desires of the heart. Nor need one make long prayers 
(Matt. vi. 7). Our petitions are not valued on account of their length, 
but of their fervor. How richly was the brief supplication of the 
good thief rewarded ! 

We may either pray alone, or in union with others. 

Our Lord exhorts us to pray to Our Father in secret (Matt. vi. 
5), and also to offer our petitions in common with others. 

3. Our prayers have a threefold object: That of praise, of 
supplication, and of thanksgiving. 

We ought to praise God on account of His infinite perfections. 
The Church gives praise to Him unceasingly; the Gloria and the 
Sanctus in the Mass, the Te Deum which is sung on great festivals, 
the Gloria Patri which we repeat so often, are all ascriptions of 
praise. The thrice holy of the seraphim (Is. vi. 3), the song the 
angels sung at Our Lord's birth (Luke ii. 14), are hymns of praise. 
We read in the Apocalypse that the principal occupation of the happy 
denizens of heaven is to give honor and glory to the Lord their God 
(Apoc. iv.), and by praising Him we may while still on earth join in 
their ceaseless song. The Magnificat uttered by the Blessed Virgin 
is a canticle of praise. It is God's will that we should implore of 
Him all that we need. God gives nothing to those who ask nothing 
of Him (Jas. i. 5). "He who asks not," says St. Teresa, "receives 
not." l^ay more, God desires that our petitions should be fervent and 
importunate; that we should not merely ask, but compel Him to 
hear us. The Lacedemonians used to place the bread for their chil- 
dren on a high beam, and force them to fetch it down for themselves ; 
thus God would have us earn what we beseech of Him. He is not, 
it is true, ignorant of our needs (Matt. vi. 32), and He could supply 
them without our telling Him of them; but He will have us ask for 
what we want, that we may not accept His gifts as a matter of course, 



674 The Means of Grace, 

but may recognize our dependence upon Him, and learn to be humble 
and thankful. The prayer of Our Lord in the garden and on the 
cross was a prayer of supplication ; as was that of the apostles on the 
sea of Galilee, that of the Christians for St. Peter when he was in 
prison. Prayer for the forgiveness of sin is a penitential prayer; 
witness the Miserere (Ps. 1.). Furthermore it is God's will that we 
thank Him for the benefits we receive from His hand (1 Thess. v. 18). 
Remember what Our Lord said to the leper who was healed (Luke 
xvii.). Gratitude is the surest means of obtaining fresh favors from 
God. The holocaust l^oe offered was a sacrifice of thanksgiving (Gen. 
viii. 20). God withdraws many blessings from man because he takes 
no heed of them and neglects to render thanks to the Giver ; He also 
sends calamities as a chastisement upon the unthankful. 



2, THE UTILITY AND NECESSITY OF PRAYER. 

1. By means of prayer we can obtain all things from God; 
but He does not always grant our petitions immediately. 

We have Our Lord's promise: Ask and it shall be given you 
(Matt. vii. 7), and again: "All things whatsoever you shall ask in 
prayer, believing, you shall receive" (Matt. xxi. 22). St. John 
Chrysostom declares that by prayer man becomes almost omnipotent 
St. Augustine terms prayer the key that unlocks the treasury of the 
divine riches. As a man can get almost anything from his fellow- 
men for gold, so he can obtain almost anything from God by means 
of prayer. Let him therefore who is in affliction call upon God for 
succor. If he fail to do this, let him blame his own indolence and 
folly, not complain of his misery. Who would have patience with a 
beggar, half -starved with cold and hunger, if he would not apply for 
aid to a rich man who had promised to help him? The apostles 
prayed when the storm arose on the lake, and it was calmed. God 
does not always grant our petitions at once. One must knock long 
and loudly at the gate of this sovereign Lord, before it is opened to 
us. Monica prayed for her son's conversion for eighteen years. 
God keeps us waiting for an answer to our prayer, both to try us, 
whether we are really in earnest, and also to make us value His gifts 
more when we do obtain them. He who is truly in earnest perseveres 
with more insistence than ever, the longer the answer to his prayer 
is delayed. So the blind man by the wayside on the road to Jericho 
cried out much more when Our Lord appeared to pay no heed to his 
cry: "Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me" (Luke xviii. 39). 
" Thou dost delay, O Lord," says St. Augustine, " to give us what 
we ask, that we may learn how to pray." Sometimes God does not 
grant us what we implore, because He knows it would be prejudicial, 
not beneficial to us. 

Our prayers obtain a speedier answer if they are accom- 
panied by fasting, almsdeeds, a promise, or if we invoke the 
intercession of the saints on our behalf; a petition is sooner 
granted if it is proffered by several persons at the same time; 
also if the suppliant is of the number of the just. 



Prayer. 675 

Fasting and almsdeeds are said to be the wings of prayer. Ee- 
member the prayer of the centurion Cornelius (Acts x.). That 
prayer receives a speedier answer in which several persons join. Our 
Lord promises : " If two of you shall consent upon earth concerning 
anything whatsoever they shall ask, it shall be done to them by My 
Father Who is in heaven" (Matt, xviii. 19). "When the Christians 
assemble together in large numbers to pray," says TertuUian, " they 
are like a great army, which compels almighty God to grant their 
petition." Wood bums more fiercely if several logs are piled to- 
gether, for one kindles the other. In the time of the Eoman emperor, 
Marcus Aurelius, a Christian legion was surrounded by the enemy, 
and the supply of water cut off. In dire distress the Christian sol- 
diers prayed fervently for rain; and before many hours had passed, 
a storm came up, and there was a heavy downpour. The united 
prayer of the Church for St. Peter was the cause of his deliverance 
from prison. How great is the power of united prayer ! This is why 
processions are held in times of calamity. The prayer of the just, 
moreover, obtains a speedier answer. The continual prayer of a just 
man availeth much (Jas. v. 16). The prayer of the prophet Elias 
for rain was quickly granted (3 Kings xvii.). 

Oftentimes God turns a deaf ear to our petition and the 
reason is generally because He will not give us what would be 
harmful for us; or because we do not deserve that our prayer 
should be granted. 

God acts like a wise physician who for the good of his patient 
will not allow him to have what would be injurious to him. If God 
sees that we shall employ His gifts amiss, He of His mercy with- 
holds them from us (St. Augustine). St. Monica earnestly implored 
almighty God to prevent her son from going to Italy. Her prayer 
was not granted, because God designed that the preaching of St. 
Ambrose should be the means of Augustine's conversion. St. Augus- 
tine himself at a later period exclaims : " Thou didst then deny my 
mother's request, O Lord, in order to grant that which had long been 
her continual prayer." God often does not grant our entreaty be- 
cause we do not deserve that grace. Those who pray without devotion 
and without faith (Jas. i. 7), or who are in mortal sin, and will not 
renounce their evil ways, are unworthy of being heard (John ix. 31). 
Many persons do not obtain what they ask, because they do not per- 
severe in prayer, their whole heart is not in their petition. Yet no 
prayer is offered in vain ; if God does not give what is asked. He be- 
stows on the suppliant something else, something better; like a parent 
who gives his child a rosy apple instead of the knife he is clamoring 
for. Even the sinner does not pray in vain, for by his prayers he 
earns the graces necessary for his conversion. When you pray, and 
your petition is not granted, do not ascribe this to unwillingness on 
God's part, but to the imperfection of your prayer, or to the poor use 
you would perhaps make of the grace if it were bestowed on you. 
Act thus, and if you have prayed aright, God will give you some 
other gift far more worth having than that which you asked for. 
God is able to do all things more abundantly than we desire or un- 
derstand (Eph. iii. 20). 



676 The Means of Grace, 

2. By means of prayer sinners become just, and the just are 
enabled to continue in a state of grace. 

By prayer sinners obtain forgiveness. Tbe penitent thief said 
only these few words : " Lord, remember me when Thou shalt come 
into Thy kingdom" (Luke xxiii. 42), and immediately Our Lord 
pardoned him. The publican in the Temple did but strike his breast, 
saying : " O God, be merciful to me a sinner," and he went down to 
his house justified (Luke xviii. 13). As soon as David heard Na- 
than's rebuke, he exclaimed: "I have sinned against the Lord," and 
the prophet immediately assured him that the Lord had taken away 
his sin (2 Kings xii. 13). "When a man begins to pray," says St. 
Augustine, " he ceases to sin ; when he ceases to pray, he begins to 
sin." Mortal sin is incompatible with the habit of prayer. Prayer 
transforms the character; by it the blind become enlightened, the 
weak become strong, sinners become saints. 

By prayer sinners become just, because it earns for them 
the graces of contrition and amendment. 

By prayer we draw down upon us the Holy Spirit, we obtain ac- 
tual grace. As the nearer the earth approaches the sun, the greater 
the light and heat she derives from it, so the nearer we draw to Christ, 
the Sun of justice, the more our soul will be enlightened and 
strengthened. We have said that the soul is enlightened by prayer; 
she learns to estimate more justly the majesty and goodness of God, 
to perceive more clearly the final end of man, the will of God, the 
worthlessness of earthly things and her own poverty. In the case of 
some saints this inward illumination manifested itself externally. 
The countenance of Moses shone, after he had been conversing with 
God on the Mount. Our Lord, while He prayed, was transfigured 
(Luke ix. 29). Many saints are known to have been surrounded 
with an aureola of glory while at prayer. By prayer we gain strength 
and power to endure the ills of life. Prayer is like a celestial dew; 
as the earth is refreshed at night by the dew from heaven, so the soul 
is revived and fortified by prayer. Thus we should have recourse to 
prayer when our work is ended and before we commence anything of 
importance. Our Lord when on earth often spent the night in 
prayer, and before His Passion He prayed long and earnestly. The 
man who is given to prayer will never be a coward. 

Prayer enables the just to continue in a state of grace, be- 
cause it is a safeguard against temptation and sin. 

Prayer is an antidote to the poison of temptation. The assaults 
of the devil darken the understanding and weaken the will; prayer 
does the very opposite ; it enlightens the understanding and strength- 
ens the will. It acts upon temptation as water does on fire; it is 
a shield which the fiery darts of the evil one cannot pierce; it is an 
anchor to the tempest-tossed vessel. It banishes sadness; the Holy 
Ghost is a comforter, He imparts joy to the heart. Our Lord prom- 
ises to refresh all who labor and are burdened, if they come to Him 
(Matt. xi. 28). St. James says: "Is any among you sad? let him 
pray " ( Jas. v. 13). During prayer, sometimes, a foretaste is given 



Prayer. 677 

us of the joys of heaven. Prayer affords to the troubled heart such 
solace as a child may find, who pours out his sorrows on the breast 
of a compassionate father. " O taste and see," says the Psalmist, 
"that the Lord is sweet" (Ps. xxxiii. 9). One day spent in prayer 
is better than years devoted to the pleasures and distractions of the 
world. By prayer the just man acquires many virtues. Pray aright, 
and you will live aright. Between those who are much together a 
certain resemblance may be perceived ; thus if we are much with God, 
we shall become like to Him. Prayer is to the soul what the sun- 
shine is to a plant; it makes it grow and bear fruit abundantly. 

3. By prayer we obtain the remission of the temporal penalty 
due to sin, and merit an eternal recompense. 

When prayer ascends to heaven, the mercy of God descends; it 
prevents the outburst of the divine wrath (St. Augustine). By 
every prayer we repeat some indulgence is gained, even though one 
is not definitely attached to it by the Holy See. Our Lord says: 
" When thou shalt pray, enter into thy chamber, and having shut the 
door, pray to thy Father in secret; and thy Father, Who seeth in 
secret, will repay thee" (Matt. vi. 6). Prayer is a work which can- 
not be accomplished without toil and conflict, for the spirits of evil 
employ all their wiles to distract those who pray, by suggesting 
irrelevant thoughts to their mind. Hence those who preserve their 
recollection in spite of the assaults of the devil, and the hindrances 
he casts in their way, expiate many sins and merit a reward. 

4. He who never prays cannot save his soul; for without 
prayer he will fall into grievous sins. 

A servant who never saluted or spoke to his master would not 
long be retained in his service. Were one to look into hell, we should 
see that the majority of souls have been lost through neglect of 
prayer. " If Our Lord," says St. Ambrose, " spent whole nights in 
prayer, what ought not we poor mortals to do to save our souls ? " He 
who does not pray is powerless to resist in the hour of temptation; 
he may be compared to a warrior without weapons, a bird without 
wings, a ship without sails or rudder; he is a reed, driven to and fro 
by every blast of wind. St. John Chrysostom says one who does not 
pray has no life in him, he has ceased to breathe. As corn must be 
stored in barns, not left lying on the damp ground, or it will grow 
mouldy and decay, so the heart of man must not continually rest 
upon earthly things; it must be lifted up to God, or it will lose its 
purity. Hence Our Lord bids us watch and pray (Matt. xxvi. 41). 
All nations of the world worship some deity or other; the obligation 
to pray is imprinted upon the human heart. 



S. S^OF OUGHT WE TO PRAY ? 

By praying we learn to pray. In this the proverb holds good: 
Practice makes perfect. Pray often, and you will find delight in 
prayer; pray seldom, and it will appear to you irksome and weari- 
some. God does not regard the length of our supplications but their 
fervor. 



678 The Means of Grace. 

If prayer is to be of utility to us, we must pray: 

1. In the name of Jesus; that is, we must ask what is in ac- 
cordance with Our Lord's desires. 

Our Lord desires whatever promotes the glory of God and the 
salvation of souls. If we pray for what is opposed to our spiritual 
welfare, we do not pray in the name of Christ; e.g., if we pray for 
earthly riches or honors, for the acquisition of superfluities. But 
we pray in the name of Christ, that is, in union with His intention, in 
His spirit, if we ask for such things as the means of earning our 
daily bread, for succor in the time of tribulation, for the conversion 
of a sinner. The Church prays in the name of Christ, for all her 
petitions conclude with the words : " Through Jesus Christ Our 
Lord." " If you ask the Father anything in My name. He will give 
it to you" (John xvi. 23). Such is Our Lord's promise. What 
monarch could refuse the petition of one who said he was authorized 
to present it by the king's own royal son ? 

2. We must pray with devotion; that is, we must fix our 
thoughts on God when we pray. 

In our prayers we hold intercourse with God. When we hold inter- 
course with our fellow-mortals, we give them our whole attention; 
how much more when we converse with God, should we fix our mind 
on Him alone! Some people honor God with their lips, while their 
heart is far from Him (Matt. xv. 8). Their thoughts wander, they 
think of their earthly employments, they do not heed what they say. 
Prayers that are so tepid and distracted avail nothing with God. 
Who, when pleading before an earthly judge, would turn to those 
about him and begin to talk to them? He would be put out of court 
for his disrespectful behavior. How can we expect God to heed our 
prayers if we do not heed them ourselves? He who prays without 
devotion and yet looks for an answer to his prayer, is like a man who 
sows bad grain, and anticipates a crop of first-rate wheat. It is not, 
however, necessary to have sensible devotion, to experience extra- 
ordinary consolation and delight in prayer. That is a supernatural 
gift, bestowed by God generally as a recompense; it does not add to 
the value of our prayers. Nor are they necessarily the worse, if we 
feel distaste and aridity. St. Teresa says that prayer under such 
circumstances may even be more meritorious because it is painful to 
nature. That prayer which costs us an effort, which we have to com- 
pel ourselves to offer, is perhaps the most acceptable in God's sight. 
Do not therefore give up prayer on account of aridity and the dis- 
inclination for it. The evil enemy seeks by this means to withdraw 
us from prayer, and God permits this trial to come upon us, in order 
that we may feel our own weakness and humble ourselves on account 
of it. And if during the whole time of prayer we do nothing else 
but resist temptations and distractions, let us not think we have 
prayed badly; God looks to our good will, in that He takes pleasure. 

In order to pray devoutly we must prepare ourselves before- 
hand, and during the time of prayer Ave must guard our sensea 
and see that we do not assume an irreverent posture. 



Prayer, 679 

" Before prayer prepare thy soul, be not as a man that tempteth 
God" (Ecclus. xviii. 23). The harper tunes his harp before begin- 
ning to play, lest there should be any discord in the melody. How 
carefully those who are admitted to an audience of some earthly 
monarch perform their toilet! Before commencing our prayer, we 
should place ourselves in the presence of God, endeavoring to realize 
that we stand in His sight, and then banish from our thoughts all 
worldly cares and interests. Let us imitate the patriarch Abraham, 
who when about to offer up his son Isaac on Mount Moria, left his 
servants, his ass, and all that was not wanted for the sacrifice, at the 
foot of the mountain, saying : " When we have worshipped, we will 
return unto you." As Our Lord drove those that sold out of the 
Temple, so we must banish all worldly affairs from our heart, when 
it is made a temple of prayer. Yet the distractions that are involun- 
tary are not sinful, only they must be repulsed and withstood. At 
prayer we must close the door, that is keep custody of the eyes, and 
withdraw into the secret chamber of the soul. The use of a prayer- 
book often keeps the eyes from wandering. As a rule one prays with 
more recollection before the statue of a saint, or in a holy place, where 
all around breathes an atmosphere of devotion. Our attitude during 
prayer should not be lacking in reverence; as far as possible we 
should remain upon our knees as an aid to devotion. 

3. We must pray with perseverance, that is, we ought not to 
desist from prayer, if our petition is not immediately granted. 

We should take example from children, who will not leave off 
clamoring until they get what they want. We mortals are apt to 
grow angry if a suppliant is too persistent, but it is not so with God ; 
He is pleased when we " batter the gates of heaven with storms of 
prayer." Kemember the parable of the importunate friend, who con- 
tinued knocking (Luke xi. 5). God sometimes puts the endurance of 
the suppliant to a severe test, as was the case with the woman of 
Chanaan (Matt. xv.). The Jews in Bethulia prayed all night, desir- 
ing help of the God of Israel, when Holofernes besieged their city, 
but the more they prayed, the more desperate the situation appeared. 
Yet they held out, and God sent them a deliverer in Judith. We have 
already said that for eighteen long years St. Monica ceased not to 
pray for her son's conversion, and how richly her constancy was re- 
warded! For God loves to come to our aid when our need is greatest. 
Let us not then be discouraged, as some are, and cease to pray if our 
prayers are not answered; the wise course would be to pray more 
earnestly the longer God delays granting our petition. For the longer 
He keeps us waiting, the more will His succor surpass our expecta- 
tions. He is able to do abundantly more than we desire or under- 
stand (Eph. iii. 20). "We have to wait a whole year," says St. 
Francis of Sales, " before the seed we sow in the ground bears fruit ; 
and are we more impatient in regard to the fruit of our prayers ? " 

4. We must pray with a pure heart; that is, our conscience 
must be free from grievous sin, or at any rate we must be in 
penitential dispositions. 



680 The Means of Grace. 

The man whose heart is not clean has not power to raise his soul 
to God, for when he begins to pray, thoughts and images of sin crowd 
in upon his mind, and hold it captive upon earth. He who prays with 
an impure heart is like a man who enters the presence of royalty 
with mud-stained garments, to implore a favor. It is only just that 
he who will not conform to the divine precepts should be excluded 
from a share in the divine benefactions. Listen to the commands of 
God, if you would have Him listen to your supplications. But as 
soon as the sinner is sincerely contrite, he may hope to obtain a hear- 
ing; God will receive his petitions as graciously as if he had never 
offended Him. In this He is unlike men, who are prone to cast 
former offences in the teeth of those who ask a favor of them. God 
looks at the present intention, not at the past actions of a man. Re- 
member how the prayer of the penitent publican in the Temple was 
accepted (Luke xviii. 13). 

6. We must pray with humility; that is, we must acknowl- 
edge our own weakness and unworthiness. 

The prayer of him that humbleth himself shall pierce the clouds 
(Ecclus. XXXV. 21). How lowly is the obeisance of one who approaches 
one of the magnates of the earth to present a petition! Prayer is 
in itself an act of humility, for by it we testify a sense of our de- 
pendence upon the Lord of heaven and of earth; we take the position 
of beggars, knocking at the door of the great Father of mankind. 

6. We must pray with confidence, that is, with a firm con- 
viction that of His infinite mercy God will grant what we ask, 
provided it will tend to His glory and to the true welfare of our 
souls. 

The prayer of him that humbleth himself shall pierce the clouds 
of what the prayer of faith ought to be (3 Kings xviii.). Our Lord 
says : " All things whatsoever you shall ask in prayer, believing, you 
shall receive" (Matt. xxi. 22). Confidence hath a great reward (Heb. 
X. 35). Let not him that wavereth think that he shall receive any- 
thing of the Lord (Jas. i. 1). 

7. We must pray with resignation to the will of God; that 
is, we must leave the granting of our petition entirely to God's 
good pleasure. 

"Not My wiU, but Thine be done " (Luke xxii. 42), was Our Lord's 
prayer on the Mount of Olives. God knows best what is for our 
good; we ought no more to dictate to Him than a sick man, who 
knows nothing of the healing art, ought to tell the physician what 
drugs he is to give him. A certain mother once was importunate in 
prayer for the recovery of her sick child. The priest told her she 
would do better to ask that God's will might be done. "No," she 
exclaimed indignantly, " God must grant me my desire." The child 
was restored to health, took to evil ways, and at last came to the 
gallows. Happy would it have been for that man had he died in his 
childhood! How much wiser it is to leave all in the hands of God, 
for He knows the future. 



Prayer. 681 



Jf. WHEN OUGHT WE TO PRAY 9 

1. As a matter of fact we ought to pray continually, for Our 
Lord requires of us *' always to pray and not to faint " (Luke xviii. 
1). 

The Apostle bids us: "Pray without ceasing" (1 Thess. v. 17). 
We may approach God at any moment ; there is no sentry before His 
door to turn us back; we have but to call upon Him by His name 
of Father, and His ear is open to us at once. " He who seeks God," 
says St. Alphonsus, " will find Him at all times and in every place." 
If our heart is continually raised to Him in prayer, we shall be like 
the angels who continually behold His countenance. If we are unceas- 
ing in prayer, we shall obtain our requests from God without diffi- 
culty, and we shall be preserved from many temptations. Our Lord 
says : " Watch ye and pray, that ye enter not into temptation," (Matt, 
xxvi. 41). The habit of constant prayer may be compared to a ram- 
part against the malign foe; to a breastplate from which his arrows 
rebound ; to a harbor, in which the rough waves cannot reach us. We 
are liable at any moment to the assaults of the devil, wherefore let 
us ever be ready, armed with prayer, as those who are exposed to the 
danger of fire always have water at hand in case a conflagration 
should break out. By continuing in prayer, we shall have a surer 
hope of maintaining ourselves in the grace of God until our life's 
end. 

It is, however, by no means required of us, nay, it would be 
impossible for us to remain constantly upon our knees; what 
we are to do is to pray while we work. 

Martha's vocation, that of active work for one's neighbor, ought 
to be united to Mary's vocation, that of contemplation and prayer. 
St. Bernard says Martha's employment was good, Mary's was better, 
but a combination of the two is best of all. Christ, Who is in all 
things our Model, united a life of activity to a life of prayer. While 
we are in this world, work must oft-times be our prayer; hereafter, 
when there is no more occasion for work, the contemplation of the 
divine majesty will be our only occupation. He who gives up work 
for the sake of prayer, deserves not, according to the dictum of the 
Apostle, to have bread to eat (2 Thess. iii. 10). 

While engaged in our work we can utter ejaculatory prayers, 
and we ought on commencing our work to direct our intention 
so as to do all to the glory of God. 

St. Teresa had in her cell a picture of Our Lord at Jacob's well; 
when her eyes fell upon it she said : " Lord, give me that living 
v/ater." St. Ignatius frequently exclaimed : " All for the greater 
glory of God." Let us accustom ourselves to say from time to time : 
" Lord, remember me in Thy kingdom." He who raises his heart to 
God ever and anon by ejaculatory prayers, will keep calm and recol- 
lected amid the turmoil and distractions of life, for ejaculations are 



682 The Means of Grace. 

no weak weapons of defence; their brevity, too, enables them to be 
said with greater fervor than longer prayers. St. Francis of Sales 
recommends the frequent and fervent repetition of the same ejacula- 
tion. Our Lord on the Mount of Olives prayed using the same words. 
St. Francis of Assisi spent the whole night repeating the words: 
^' My God and my all." St. Paul bids us : " Whether ye eat or drink, 
or whatsoever else you do, do all to the glory of God" (1 Cor. x. 
31). It is well to direct one's intention in the morning, and renew 
it before every undertaking of any importance. 

We should do well to employ our leisure time in prayer. 

Blessed Clement Hofbauer answered a man who complained that 
his time hung heavy on his hands, with the words : " Well, then, you 
can pray." The saints spent as much time as they could in prayer; 
it is recorded of St. James that through being constantly on his 
knees, callosities formed on them. The Christian need not pray 
in a manner to be observed by others, but he can always pray in 
spirit, whatever his occupations may be. The saints used to make 
use of visible things to raise their thoughts to what is unseen; nat- 
ural objects suggested to them thoughts of the supernatural. St. 
Gregory Nazianzen, seeing the shells washed up on the seashore and 
the immovable rocks that resisted the shock of the waves, compared 
the former to men who had no mastery over themselves, and the 
latter to those whom no temptation could seduce. The sight of a 
lamb led St. Francis of Assisi to speak of the meekness of the Ke- 
deemer; to other saints the sight of a flower, a picture, a church, was 
enough to inspire holy thoughts and practical reflections. This is 
no wonder, for all visible objects should recall to our mind the om- 
nipotence and bounty of the Creator, and invite us to pay Him 
homage. Our life ought to be one uninterrupted prayer; for our 
mind ought to be detached from earthly things, and our conversation 
in heaven. 

2. We ought to pray more especially every morning and eve- 
ning, before and after meals, and when we hear the Angelus. 

1. In the morning we ought to give thanks to God for hav- 
ing preserved us during the night, and beseech Him to protect 
us during the day from misfortune and from sin, and to give us 
what is needful for our bodily sustenance. 

The morning prayer should be said kneeling, and before we 
take our breakfast. The birds set us an example in this respect; 
they warble their morning song before they seek to satisfy their 
hunger. " We ought to prevent the sun to bless Thee, and adore 
Thee at the dawning of the light" (Wisd. xvi. 28). A particular 
blessing rests upon our morning prayer. As the Israelites could 
only gather the manna before the sun was up, so we cannot expect 
God's blessing on the day if we do not consecrate its earliest hours 
to Him by prayer. As a well-spent youth influences a man's whole 
life, so the manner in which the day is begun influences all its later 
hours. In the morning God is more easily found : " They that in 
the morning early watch for Me shall find Me " (Prov. viii. 17). The 



Prayer, 683 

early Christians used to meet together at daybreak for divine wor- 
ship. He who on rising neglects to pray, and gives his attention 
at once to temporal concerns, cannot expect God's blessing on his 
day's work. If the foundation of a house is unsound, the super- 
structure will soon fall in. 

2. At night we ought to give thanks to God for the benefits 
we have received during the day, and beseech Him to pardon the 
sins we have committed in its course, and to protect us during 
the coming night. 

At our night prayers we ought to make an examination of con- 
science. Every merchant at the close of the day reckons up his 
gain or loss, although only temporal profits are in question; how 
much more ought the Christian to make a careful scrutiny of the 
transactions which affect his spiritual interests. Priests and relig- 
ious have to recite the breviary at seven different times in the day. 
David says: "Seven times a day have I given praise to Thee" (Ps. 
cxviii. 164). The early Christians used to pray at midnight (Acts 
xvi. 26), and at the hours of the Passion: When Our Lord was con- 
demned (nine o'clock), crucified (noon), when He died (three o'clock), 
and when He was laid in the grave (sunset). These are the fixed 
hours for reciting the divine office, but priests are not obliged to 
adhere to them strictly. 

3. Before and after meals we ought to give thanks to God 
for our nourishment, and implore His grace to avoid such sins 
as are committed at table. 

" When thou shalt have eaten and art full, take heed diligently 
lest thou forget the Lord" (Deut. vi. 12, 13). Daniel when in the lion's 
den thanked God for the dinner that He sent to him (Dan. xiv. 37). 
Those who do not give thanks before and after their meals are like 
the beasts of the field. King Alfonso of Aragon, observing that 
his courtiers did not give thanks either before or after their repasts, 
gave them a practical lesson in this respect. He invited a beggar 
to his royal table, forbidding him most strictly either to make an 
obeisance on entering the dining hall, or to express his gratitude to 
the king when departing. The man obeyed his orders, and went 
away without a word or sign. The courtiers were highly incensed; 
but the king checked their wrath, saying : " Is not this exactly how 
you act towards your heavenly King? You neither ask a blessing 
nor return thanks; has He not as much reason to be indignant with 
you as you have with this ignorant mendicant ? " The courtiers 
acknowledged the justice of the rebuke and never after omitted to 
say grace before and after meals. The sins committed at table usu- 
ally are sins of intemperance, anger (if all is not to our liking), and 
detraction. And when the appetite is satisfied, there comes the 
temptation to sloth and self-indulgence. 

4. We ought also to pray when the Angelus rings, calling 
upon us three times a day, morning, noon, and evening, to say 
the Angelic Salutation; and if we are near a church, when we 



684 Tlie Means of Grace, 

hear the bell for the consecration, or for benediction of the 
Blessed Sacrament. 

3. Furthermore we ought to pray in the hour of affliction, dis- 
tress, or temptation, when entering upon an important undertak- 
ing, and when we feel an inspiration and desire to pray. 

We ought to pray in times of distress, for God enjoins this upon 
us : " Call upon Me in the day of trouble ; I will deliver thee and 
thou shalt glorify Me" (Ps. xlix. 15). How did the apostles act 
when the storm arose on the lake? Too often in their troubles men 
seek after human aid. In temptation we ought also to have recourse 
to prayer. " Watch ye and pray, that ye enter not into temptation " 
(Matt. xxvi. 41). St. Francis of Sales says that when we are as- 
sailed by temptation we should do as little children do if they are 
frightened by the approach of some animal; they run to their father 
or mother. On commencing any important undertaking we ought 
to pray. Tobias exhorts his son : " Desire of God to direct thy 
ways " (Tob. iv. 20). Our Lord passed the whole night in prayer to 
God before He chose the twelve apostles (Luke vi. 12) ; He prayed 
before the raising of Lazarus (John xi. 41), and before He went 
to His Passion (Luke xxii. 41). The apostles prayed before they 
chose Matthias by lot (Acts i. 23). St. Peter prayed before he re- 
called Tabitha to life (Acts ix. 40). St. Jerome admonishes us to 
arm ourselves by prayer at our outgoing, and on our incoming to let 
prayer be our first action. We should also make use of those mo- 
ments when we feel moved to pray. The mariner hastens to put 
to sea when he finds the wind is favorable; so we, when we perceive 
the impulse of the Holy Spirit, must follow His gracious inspirations. 
Unhappily those moments are too often allowed to slip by, or dis- 
traction is sought in worldly amusements. Of this the entertain- 
ments held after weddings, and on great festivals of the Church, 
the feasts the poor make after funerals, etc., afford abundant evi- 
dence. How much those who thus act will have one day to answer 
for ! Such solemn times should be times of greater devotion. 



5. WHERE OUGHT WE TO PRAY? 

1. We can and ought to pray in every place, because God is 
everywhere present. 

Our Lord Himself prayed, not only in the Temple at Jerusalem, 
and in the synagogues, but also in the desert, on the mountains, in 
the cenacle, in the Garden of Olives, on the cross. Jacob prayed 
in the open country, Jonas in the belly of the whale. Job on the 
dunghill, Daniel in the lion's den, Manasses in prison. Paul and 
Silas lying bound in a dungeon, prayed and praised God, so that 
the foundations of the prison were shaken. We can only speak 
with God when He is present, and He is present everywhere (Acts 
xvii. 24). Eemember Our Lord's words to the woman of Samaria 
(John iv. 23). God does not regard the place in which we pray, 
but the dispositions with which we pray. 



Prayer. 685 

2. The house of God is the place specially set apart for prayer. 

The house of God is the house of prayer (Matt. xxi. 13). Some 
say there is no need to go to church, because the whole earth is the 
temple of God. This is false; God enjoins upon us by the mouth 
of the Church to go to His house on Sundays and festivals. Our 
Lord Himself set us an example in this respect, for He was often to 
be found in the Temple at Jerusalem. Petitions offered in a church 
have greater efficacy, because the place is consecrated, and we can also 
pray with more devotion, because our surroundings are an aid to 
recollection, and we can put aside our daily cares. Besides, the 
prayers we offer in church are heard more quickly because Our Lord 
is present there under the eucharistic veils; He has promised that: 
" Where there are two or three gathered together in My name, there 
am I in the midst of them," and He will help us to pray aright. 
However it must not be thought that true piety consists in spending 
long hours in the church. 

3. A solitary place is also suitable for prayer. 

Our Lord was accustomed to withdraw into solitude for prayer. 
He prayed in the desert (Luke v. 16), on mountains, in the Garden 
of Olives (Luke xxii. 39). He bids us retire into our chamber and 
shut the door (Matt. vi. 6), for in solitude one is less likely to be dis- 
tracted, and one can pray more fervently. 



6. FOR WHAT OUGHT WE TO PRAY f 

1. We ought to implore of God many things and great things; 
benefits not appertaining to time so much as to eternity. 

Supposing a king said to you : " Ask what you will ;" would you 
not ask a great favor of him ? Well, it is nothing more than what 
God says to you. We ought to ask great things of God, because we 
have to do with One Who is infinitely rich and powerful. Let us not be 
contented with what we have already received, but ever beg for more. 
God is more ready to give than we to receive. Let us not ask so much 
for temporal and transitory benefits, but rather for those that are 
eternal. I^o one would presume to ask of an emperor what was use- 
less and worthless ; much less should we venture to implore the Lord 
of heaven and earth for the things of time and sense. It is the act 
of a fool to treasure up worthless shells and cast away precious pearls ; 
to choose glittering tinsel rather than pure gold. Let us therefore 
pray for the joys of heavci. and for whatsoever will help us to attain 
them. 

2. We ought more especially to beseech almighty God to grant 
us such things as are conducive to His glory, and to our salvation, 
and in no wise to ask for what will only serve to gratify our 
earthly desires. 

To those who pray Our Lord says : " Seek ye first the kingdom of 
God and His justice, and all these things shall be added to you " 



686 The Means of Grace'. 

(Matt. V. 33). Hence we may conclude that if we ask for the good 
things of eternity, those of time will also be bestowed on us. King 
Solomon prayed for wisdom to govern his people aright; God gave 
him a wise and understanding heart and in addition earthly riches 
and glory in abundance (3 Kings iii.). It is not right to ask of God 
what is only calculated to gratify our earthly concupiscences; such 
prayers are not granted (Jas. iv. 3). "There are many," says St. 
Augustine, " who, in what they ask, do not seek God's glory, but their 
own sensual pleasures; they would degrade God to be their servant, 
the servant of their covetousness, their pride, their avarice, their 
luxury." King Jeroboam's hand was withered, because he stretched 
it out against the man of God. He prayed that his hand might be 
restored, not that his sin might be forgiven (3 Kings xiii. 6). Many 
people do likewise; in their prayers they think only of the needs of 
the body, not those of the soul. Let us never pray that our will, but 
that God's will be done; let us not wish for the accomplishment of 
those desires which arise from our fallen nature, but of those with 
which the Holy Spirit inspires our soul. 



7. MEDITATION, 

1. Meditation, i.e., contemplative prayer, consists in dwell- 
ing upon the truths of religion, in order to awaken within our 
minds good resolutions. 

Costly spices give out their aroma most freely when they are 
bruised in a mortar; so the truths of religion have most influence 
upon the soul that ponders on them. One who meditates upon holy 
things is like a man striking fire with flint and steel; he strikes the 
stony heart with the keen edge of the understanding until sparks 
fly out, that is, good resolutions are elicited from the will. Medita- 
tion is only difficult until the Holy Spirit makes His gracious action 
felt. Like a vessel that must be propelled by toilsome rowing until a 
favorable wind springs up and inflates her sails, then the oar is no 
longer needed, for she runs swiftly before the breeze — so in meditation 
the powers of the mind must be exercised laboriously, until the Holy 
Ghost breathes upon the soul, guiding it and elevating it. If we 
strive to elicit a succession of beautiful thoughts and elaborate mean- 
ings, this is not prayer, but study. "^Hien once we have struck fire, 
let us toil no more, but forthwith kindle the torch. 

2. Meditation is a most excellent method of prayer, but it 
must not be pursued to the exclusion of vocal prayer. 

By mental prayer we imitate on earth the occupation of the 
angels who constantly contemplate the face of God, and meditate on 
His perfections. The saints have bequeathed to us many books of 
meditations; if we read these attentively it is equivalent to prayer. 
Mental prayer must alternate with vocal prayer; these two methods 
of prayer are the two feet that carry us forward on the way to heaven. 
Meditation is a necessary preliminary to prayer; without it prayer 
will be imperfect, the needful devotion will be lacking. 



The Most Important Prayers. 687 

3. By means of meditation we obtain actual graces, and ad- 
vance rapidly on the path of perfection. 

We obtain many actual graces in meditation; for as we receive 
light and warmth when we stand by a fire, so by meditation upon the 
truths of religion the mind is enlightened to see the worthlessness of 
earthly things, the end of man, the rigor of the divine judgments, 
and the heart is inflamed with the love of justice. It is a furnace 
wherein the fire of divine charity is kindled, a door whereby divine 
grace enters into the heart of man. A soul that practises meditation 
is like a cultivated field which produces abundant fruit, a well- 
watered garden in which flowers bloom luxuriantly. He who neglects 
to ponder upon the truths of religion knows nothing of their force; 
his spiritual sight is dimmed, he is engrossed with the things of earth. 
With desolation is all the land made desolate, because there is none 
that considereth in his heart (Jer. xii. 11). The subjects chosen for 
meditation ought to be those which have most power to attract and 
influence us, and to these we should frequently recur. Thus bees 
alight upon the flowers which contain the sweet juice whence they 
make their honey. Meditation is a means of attaining perfection. 
St. Ambrose says daily meditation is the antidote for tepidity. It was 
the foundation of the conversion of St. Ignatius and other saints. 
St. Teresa declares that mental prayer and mortal sin are incom- 
patible; they exclude one another; one or the other must of neces- 
sity be given up. 



THE MOST IMPORTANT PRAYERS. 

TEE OUR FATHER. 

The Our Father is also known as the Lord's Prayer, because 
it was taught us by Christ Our Lord Himself. 

1. The Our Father takes precedence of all other prayers; it 
is especially distinguished by its power, its simplicity and its 
comprehensiveness. 

There is no more holy and excellent prayer than the Our Father. 
It has greater cogency than any other prayer, because in it we do not 
merely pray in the name of Jesus, but in His own words. Of this 
prayer more than of any other Our Lord's promise holds good: "If 
you ask the Father anything in My name. He will give it you" 
(John xvi. 23). It is the simplest of all prayers; its words are few, 
but it is rich in meaning. It is so simple that a child's lips may utter 
it devoutly; yet the theologian seeks in vain to sound its depths; it 
is suited to every class and condition of men. In the Lord's Prayer 
we ask for all things that are needful for our soul and our body; it 
comprises all for which we ought to pray; nothing that can be found 
in the most excellent of prayers is lacking in it. It is an epitome of 
the holy Gospel Not only does it teach us the things for which we 
ought to ask, but the rierht order in which to ask for them. 



688 The Means of Grace, 

The Our Father consists of an address, seven petitions, and the 
word Amen. 

2. The address places the soul in the right disposition for 
prayer; it awakens within us confidence in God and raises our 
thoughts to Him. 

The word " Father " awakens confidence in God, the words " Who 
art in heaven" raise our thoughts to Him. Thus at the very com- 
mencement of this prayer we make acts of faith, hope, and charity. 

"We call God Father, because He created us to His image 
(Gen. i. 27), because the Son of God became our Brother by His 
Incarnation (Eph. i. 5), and because at baptism the Holy Spirit 
took up His abode within us, and made us the children of God 
(Kom. viii. 15). 

In approaching the great ones of the earth, we are doubtful by 
what title we ought to address them; it is not so with God. We ad- 
dress Him as Father, and this familiar title pleases Him better than 
any other. No mortal would have dared to call the almighty Ruler 
of the universe by the name of Father, had not His only-begotten Son 
given us permission to do so. God would not have us address Him 
as our Creator, Lord, or King, because these titles convey an idea of 
severity, and inspire fear. He would have us call Him Father, be- 
cause this is a title which bespeaks affection, and love is a far more 
exalted feeling than fear. 

We call God Our Father because we, as brethren, ought to 
pray for one another. 

In the Lord's prayer the individual prays for all, and all for the 
individual, hence it is the common prayer of all Christians. Our 
own needs compel us to pray for ourselves ; fraternal charity urges us 
to pray for others. Our Lord Himself says : " All you are brethren " 
(Matt, xxiii. 8), and calls the apostles His brethren (Matt, xxviii. 10). 
The apostles spoke of the faithful as their brethren (Rom. i. 13; 
xii. 1). Those may rightly be called brethren, who have but one 
Father in heaven. 

We say: " Who art in heaven," because although God is 
present everywhere, heaven is His throne, and there only is He 
beheld face to face (1 Cor. xiii. 12). 

3. In the first petition we pray that God may he glorified. 
The meaning of the first petition is this: Grant, O God, that 

we may acknowledge and revere Thy majesty more and more. 

To give glory to God is the end of creation, and consequently 
it is the highest aim of every creature. 

4. In the next three petitions we ask for these blessings: Eter- 
nal salvation, grace to fulfil the divine will, and the possession of 



TJie Most Important Prayers, 689 

those things which are indispensable to the maintenance of oui 
earthly existence. 

The meaning of the second petition is this: Give unto us 
eternal life after death. 

The meaning of the third petition is this: Give us grace to 
fulfil Thy will as perfectly on earth as the angels do in heaven. 

The meaning of the fourth petition is this: Bestow upon us 
all that is necessary for the maintenance of life, such as food, 
clothes, money, health. 

5. In the next three petitions we pray that three e'ils may 
be averted from us: The evil of sin, the evil of temptation, and 
those evils which are prejudicial to life. 

The meaning of the fifth petition is this: Forgive us our 
sins, as we forgive those who have sinned against us. 

The meaning of the sixth petition is this: Deliver us from 
those temptations to which we should succumb. 

The meaning of the seventh petition is this: Avert from us 
all things which are injurious to life, such as famine, pestilence, 
war, etc. 

The evils mentioned in the last three petitions are exactly 
opposed to the blessings enumerated above. 

Eternal happiness is opposed to sin, which makes us eternally 
wretched. 

The grace of God is opposed to temptation; for grace en- 
lightens the understanding and fortifies the will, whereas temp- 
tation darkens the understanding and weakens the will. 

The things which are necessary for the maintenance of our 
life are opposed to those which are injurious to it. 

The seven petitions may therefore be divided into three di- 
visions, of which the first has reference to God, the two others to 
ourselves. 

6. The word Amen is the answer of God to the suppliant; in 
this place it is equivalent to the words: Be assured that thy 
prayer is heard. 

In other prayers the meaning of the word Amen is " So be 
it," or: We entreat most earnestly that our prayer may be 
granted. 

As in the Lord's Prayer the word Amen Is to be considered as 
God's answer, whenever it occurs in the Mass the priest says it, 
speaking in God's name; but at the conclusion of the other prayers 
and collects of the Church, the server says Amen. Our Lord often 
employed the word Amen, principally as an asseveration. 



690 The Means of Grace, 

The Our Father has from time immemorial been in use in the 
Church, both in holy Mass and almost all other public acts of wor- 
ship. 

TEE AYE MARIA, 

The principal prayers to the Mother of God which are in 
common use are (1), The Ave Maria or the Angelical Salutation; 
(2), The Angelns; (3), The Eosary; (4), The Litany of Loretto 
and the Salve Regina. 

Catholics almost invariably add the Ave Maria to the Pater 
Nosier, 

It has always been customary among Christians to imitate the 
example of the archangel Gabriel, and salute our blessed Lady in 
his words. The devotion to Mary was not introduced by the decree 
of a council, nor at the behest of any Pope; at all times the faithful 
have been wont to pay their devout homage to the Queen of heaven. 
She herself foresaw that this would be so ; that all generations would 
call her blessed (Luke i. 48). 

The Ave Maria is also called the Angelical Salutation, be- 
cause it commences with the words of the archangel. 

1. The Ave Maria consists of three parts: The salutation oi 
the archangel Gabriel, the greeting of Elizabeth, and the words oi 
the Church. 

The salutation of the archangel nms thus: "Hail, full of grace, 
the Lord is with thee; blessed art thou among women" (Luke i, 
28). The greeting of Elizabeth is this: "Blessed art thou among 
women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb " (v. 42). The remain- 
ing words were added by the Church. The first and second parts are 
an ascription of praise, the third part is a supplication. The first 
and second parts were recited by the faithful in the earliest ages 
of Christianity in their present form, while the concluding words 
were varied. St. Athanasius used to add : " Pray for us, Patron and 
Lady, Queen and Mother of God." From the time of Luther it was 
customary to end with the words : " Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray 
for us." The final clause now in use dates from the reign of Pope 
St. Pius v., who directed it to be printed in all the authorized prayer- 
books. After the heretic ^Nestorius denied the right of the Blessed 
Virgin to the title of Mother of God, the Ave Maria was more fre- 
quently on the lips of Christians than it was in earlier times. And 
when, in the thirteenth century, other sects arose who refused to 
give the saints the veneration due to them, the devotion to Our 
Lady assumed a more and more prominent place, and from that 
time forth the Ave Maria became an invariable adjunct to the Pater 
Noster in all the public services of the Church. 

2. The Ave Maria is a most potent prayer, and one which is 
full of meaning. 



The Most Important Prayers, 691 

The Ave Maria is especially efficacious in time of temptation; 
many saints recommend the faithful to recite it, when evil thoughts 
assail them. 

Bj the words: " Hail Mary " we testify our reverence for 
the Mother of God. 

It is the part of the inferior to salute the superior. Mary is the 
Mother of the King of kings, she is the Queen of angels and saints, 
and yet our Mother also. The highest veneration of angels and men 
is due to her, and therefore we ought reverently to salute her. The 
words Ave Maria indicate that Mary is a second, a happier Eve; she 
is the Mother of mankind. Ave is a play on the name Eva, the 
order of the letters being reversed. Thus the words of the arch- 
angel seem to signify : " Eve was full of sin, thou art full of grace ; 
the devil was with Eve, God is with thee; Eve was cursed among 
women, thou art blessed among women; Eve gave birth to the ac- 
cursed Cain, whereas the fruit of thy womb is the blessed Jesus." 

The words : " full of grace " have this signification : " Thou 
hast received the graces of the Holy Spirit in a higher degree 
than all the saints together." 

As the moon gives more light than all the hosts of stars, so the 
Mother of God possesses the supernatural light of the Holy Spirit to 
a greater extent than all the saints. The full plenitude of grace 
was poured out on her, whereas it was bestowed but partially on 
all the other saints. So richly was Mary endowed with grace that 
she approaches more nearly than any other being to the Author of 
all grace. God might have created a greater heaven, a greater &arth, 
but a greater Mother than Mary He could r.ot create. The name 
Mary means sea; she is indeed an ocean of grace. The angel said 
to her : " Thou hast found grace with God." Only that which was 
lost can be found : Mary had not lost grace, therefore she found what 
man had lost. Let those then who have by their sins lost the grace 
of God, hasten to Mary, that they may recover it at her hands. 

The words: " The Lord is with thee," have this signification: 
" Thou art united, body and soul with God in the closest union." 

In the Temple at Jerusalem, which was outwardly of a dazzling 
whiteness, and inwardly overlaid with gold, God was continually 
present in a luminous cloud. The Temple was a type of the Mother 
of God, for in her the incarnate God dwelt, making her the temple of 
the Deity. In celebrating Holy Mass the priest turns seven times to 
the people with the words : Dominus vobiscum; thus wishing them 
the closest union with the Godhead, through the sanctifying grace 
of the Holy Spirit. Of old such forms of greeting were customary; 
Saul made use of similar words when dismissing David before his 
contest with Goliath (1 Kings xvii. 37) ; David when dying, ad- 
dressed Solomon in the same manner (1 Par. xxii. 11) ; and Tobias 
did the same when his son was starting on his journey (Tob. v. 21). 

The words: "Blessed art thou among women, and blessed 
is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus," have this signification : " Thou 



692 TTie Means of Grace. 

art the most blessed among women because thy child Jesus was 
supremely blessed." 

As a tree is considered good if it bears good fruit, so Mary is 
lauded for the sake of her Son. She is the tree of life in paradise, 
and Christ is the fruit of that tree. All the angels of God adore 
the Child that was born of her (Heb. i. 6). Mothers who have had 
good children have always been called blessed; witness the woman, 
who after listening to Our Lord's discourse, lifted up her voice to 
extol His Mother (Luke xi. 27). It is not because Mary was blessed 
that her Child was blessed, but the contrary. He, the Author and 
Source of all grace, filled her with benediction. Christ is not said 
to be blessed among men, as Mary is among women, because He 
is the Creator of all men, and cannot be placed in comparison with 
His creatures. When Judith appeared before King Ozias after 
slaying Holofernes, he declared her to be blessed above all women 
on the earth (Judith xiii. 23). How much more does Mary merit 
this praise, since she co-operated in the redemption of the whole 
human race! Both the archangel and St. Elizabeth addressed the 
same words to her to indicate that she was to receive homage alike 
from angels and men. 

At the close of the Ave Maria we entreat the Mother of 
God to pray for us in the hour of death, for then above all other 
times we have most need of assistance. 

At the hour of death, in addition to physical suffering, we shall 
perhaps have to sustain violent assaults of temptation. "How ve- 
hemently," exclaims St. Bonaventure, "does the devil attack man 
in his last hour, and for this reason, because so short a time is left 
for him to accomplish his work." The uncertanty of our salvation 
also causes us terrible anxiety at the hour of death. In all these 
tribulations Mary is our surest helper, for she is " the Health of the 
sick, the Comforter of the afflicted, the Refuge of sinners." When 
she appears beside the dying, all evil enemies take to flight. Many 
a one who was devout to the Mother of God, owed it to her that he 
was reconciled with God on his death-bed, that he had the last sacra- 
ments, or received other supernatural aid. She even appeared in 
person to several saints. " Mary," says St. Jerome, " assists her 
faithful servants in death; she goes to meet them on their way to 
heaven, she prevails upon the Judge of all men to give them a mer- 
ciful sentence." 

We speak of ourselves as sinners, to render the Mother of 
God more inclined to listen to us. 

Mary is most ready to interest herself on behalf of sinners; she 
knows what it cost her divine Son to redeem mankind and restore 
to our fallen race the graces we had lost. It would seem as if Mary- 
did not estimate at its true value the sacrifice of Christ, if she 
had no great love for sinners. There is no sinner fallen so low that 
the Mother of God would not willingly befriend him were he to 
invoke her aid with a real intention to amend. God has committed 
judgment to His Son, grace and mercy to His Mother's hands. 



The Most Important Prayers, 603 



TEE ANGELUS, 

If the Mohammedan three times a day turns his face towards 
Mecca, and calls upon God and His prophet Mohammed, how much 
more ought the Christian frequently to look up to heaven during 
the day, and invoke the divine Redeemer and His blessed Mother. 

The Angelus is a prayer which is to be recited morning, noon, 
and night, when the bell rings, in honor of the Mother of God 
and in adoration of the mystery of the Incarnation. 

The words are as follows: (1), The angel of the Lord (the arch- 
angel Gabriel) announced unto Mary (the birth of the Saviour), and 
she conceived of the Holy Ghost (through the operation of the Holy 
Ghost she became the Mother of Christ) ; (2), Behold the hand- 
maid of the Lord, be it done unto me according to thy word (by 
these words Mary drew down from above the Son of God) ; (3), And 
the Word (the Son of God) was made flesh, and dwelt among us (for 
thirty- three years He lived on earth). 

The cutsom of ringing the Angelus bell three times a day 
dates from the period of the crusades (1095). 

At first the bell was only rung twice a day, half an hour before 
sunrise and half an hour after sunset, to call upon the faithful to 
pray God for the successor of the crusaders' arms. The midday bell 
was added about three centuries and a half later. At first the prayer 
said consisted only of a Pater Noster, afterwards the Ave Maria 
was added. The manner of ringing three separate times at the in- 
terval of about a minute, an Ave Maria being said each time, was 
introduced later by order of the Holy See, the object of the prayer 
being to entreat the Mother of God to exterminate the heresies that 
had arisen. The Angelus as it is now said is of more recent date. 

In some places after the evening Angelus the bell sounds 
again to admonish the faithful to pray for the souls in purgatory. 

Pope Clement XII. granted an indulgence of one hundred days 
to all who, hearing the bell, should recite kneeling one Our Father 
and Hail Mary, with the versicle : " Eternal rest give to them, O 
Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them." 



TEE ROSARY. 

The suppliant who prays fervently is wont to repeat over and 
over again words which come from the depth of the heart. Our Lord 
did this on Mount Olivet; David in Psalm cxxxv., exclaims no less 
than twenty-seven times "His mercy endureth forever," and St. 
Francis of Assisi spent whole nights repeating : " My God and my 
all." The devout servants of Mary used to address her frequently in 
the words of the archangel, adding one Ave Maria to another, as 
one places roses in a wreath. 



694 The Means of Oraca, 

1. The Rosary is a prayer in which the Our Father, followed 
by ten Hail Marys, is repeated five or fifteen times, accompanied 
by meditation on the life, the Passion, and the exaltation of the 
Redeemer. 

We begin the Rosary with the Creed and three Hail Marys, for 
the increase within us of the three theological virtues. While 
reciting the Rosary every one must hold his own rosary in his hand, 
and touch the beads as he says the prayers; but if several persons 
join in saying it, it is only necessary for one to hold the rosary, in 
order thereby to regulate the number of the prayers. The Rosary 
is divided into the joyful, the sorrowful and the glorious mysteries; 
in the first we honor God the Father Who sent us the Saviour; in 
the second, God the Son Who redeemed us ; in the third God the 
Holy Ghost, Who sanctifies us. 

2. The Rosary owes its origin to St. Dominic. 

The hermits of the first centuries, who could not reacf the psalter, 
used to recite one Our Father and one Hail Mary in the place of 
every psalm; and in order to note the number they had said, they 
made use of small stones, or of seeds strung on a cord. St. Dominic 
was the first who made the custom general of substituting one hun- 
dred and fifty Hail Marys for the one hundred and fifty psalms; 
hence the rosary used to be called the Psalter of Mary. When, about 
the year 1200, the heresies of the Albigenses wrought great mischief 
in the south of France and the north of Italy, St. Dominic was com- 
missioned by the Pope to preach in refutation of their erroneous 
tenets. His efforts availed little, and he besought the aid of the 
Mother of God. She appeared to him, and bade him make use of the 
rosary as a weapon against her enemies. He accordingly introduced 
it everywhere, and before long it had effected the conversion of more 
than a hundred thousand heretics. The use of the Rosary soon 
spread throughout Christendom, and it became a most popular devo- 
tion. It is a method of prayer at once simple and sublime; the 
prayers are so easy that a child can repeat them, and the mysteries 
are so profound that they supply a subject for meditation to the most 
learned theologians. It is a prayer of contemplation as well as a 
prayer of supplication, for it places before the mind the principal 
truths of the faith. The Rosary is a compendium of the Gospels; a 
complete and practical manual of instruction wherein the chief points 
of Christian doctrine are presented under the guise of prayer. By 
meditation on the events of Our Lord's life faith and charity are in- 
creased; from the example of our divine Redeemer we learn to be 
humble, gentle, obedient; we are incited to imitate the virtues which 
the mysteries teach, to strive after what they promise us. Moreover 
the union of vocal and mental prayer makes the Rosary easy, pleasant, 
and profitable. As a method of prayer it is unrivalled ; the longer and 
mor^ devoutly it is practised, the more one appreciates its excellence 
and becomes convinced of its supernatural origin. 

3. The Rosary is well pleasing to God, because of its hu- 
mility, and because it is an imitation of the unceasing song of 
praise sung by the angels. 



The Most Important Prayers* 695 

The Rosary is the prayer of the humble, for in it well-known 
truths are simply stated and constantly repeated. The proud despise 
it, but God, Who looks down on the low things (Ps. cxii. 6), ap- 
proves it. It is an imitation of the angel's song: we read in Holy 
Scripture that the angelic choirs cry to one another: "Holy, holy, 
holy, Lord God of hosts; all the earth is full of His glory" (Is. vi. 
3). And when we recite the Rosary, we praise the Mother of God 
in a similar manner. It is beyond a doubt that this form of prayer 
is most acceptable to the Mother of God, for when she appeared at 
Lourdes she had a rosary in her hand. Pope Pius IX. unhesitatingly 
asserts that it is her gift to men, and she loves no other prayer as 
well. 

4. The Rosary is a most useful devotion, for by it we ob- 
tain great graces and sure help in time of trouble; many in- 
dulgences are besides attached to it. 

The Rosary is a very treasury of graces. Many sinners owe their 
conversion to it. It possesses marvellous power to banish sin and 
restore the transgressor to a state of grace. By it the just grow in 
virtue. All the saints who have lived subsequently to the institution 
of the Rosary have been assiduous in its use, and this may have con- 
tributed largely to their sanctification. Several holy bishops and 
servants of God are known to have pledged themselves by vow to recite 
it daily; St. Charles Borromeo, despite the numerous and pressing 
duties of his position, recited it every day with the seminarists and 
the members of his household. Blessed Clement Hofbauer was ac- 
customed to say the Rosary while passing through the streets of 
Vienna, and rarely did he recite it in vain for the conversion of a 
sinner. It is recorded of several distinguished officers and victorious 
commanders that they never engaged in battle without first saying 
the Rosary, and to this they attributed their military successes. The 
Rosary has been called " the thermometer of Christianity," for the 
reason that where it is diligently recited faith is ardent, and good 
works are manifest; and where it is neglected religion is at a low 
ebb. In seasons of general calamity, miraculous aid has been granted 
to Christendom by means of the Rosary ; this was especially the case 
in wars with the Turks, the victory of Lepanto (1571), the deliverance 
of Vienna (1683), the victory of Belgrade were all owing to the power 
of the Rosary. It was said that the beads of the chaplet did more 
execution than the bullets of the soldiers. It was in thanksgiving 
for these victories that the Holy See instituted the feast of the 
Holy Rosary on the first Sunday in October. Pope Sixtus IV. de- 
clared that many dangers which threatened the world are averted, 
and the wrath of God is appeased by the prayers of the Rosary. Our 
Holy Father Leo XIII. says that, as in St. Dominic's time the Rosary 
proved a sure remedy for the evils of the age, so it may now effect 
much towards the amelioration of the ills that afflict society. Every 
one who recites the Rosary must feel its supernatural power; there 
is no prayer which affords more consolation in affliction, more tran- 
quillity to the troubled breast. It soothes in sorrow, it imparts the 
peace spoken of in the Gospel. Another proof of its excellence is the 
hatred and contempt wherewith unbelievers regard it. The devil in- 



696 Tfie Means of Grace, 

cites them to decry what is a fruitful source of grace to the Christian, 
and by which souls are wrested from his grasp. The Rosary has been 
richly indulgenced by the Holy See, and the recital of it strongly 
urged upon the faithful. An indulgence of a hundred days may be 
gained for every Pater and Ave, if five consecutive decades be said, 
on a properly indulgenced rosary. Our Holy Father Leo XIII. has 
decreed that every day during the month of October, the Rosary, 
together with the litany of Loretto, be said in church either during 
the parish Mass, or in the afternoon, with the Blessed Sacrament 
exposed. For every time of assisting at this devotion seven years 
and seven quarantines are granted. Pope Pius IX. bequeathed, as 
a legacy to the faithful, this admonition : " Let the Rosary, this 
simple, beautiful method of prayer, enriched with many indulgences, 
be habitually recited of an evening in every household. These are 
my last words to you ; the memorial I leave behind me." Again he 
said : " In the whole of the Vatican there is no greater treasure than 
the Rosary," 



TEE LITANY OF LORETTO AND THE SALVE BEGIN A. 

The Litany of Loretto is a form of prayer in which the most 
glorious titles are given to the Mother of God, and her inter- 
cession is unceasingly implored. 

The litany of Loretto takes its origin and its name from the place 
of pilgrimage in Italy, Loretto, where the holy house of Nazareth 
now stands. In this litany first of all God is called upon for mercy, 
as in the Eyrie Eleison of the Mass. This is followed by the invo- 
cation of the most Holy Trinity. Then the Blessed Mother of God 
is invoked, and her intercession is besought. These invocations may 
be divided into six groups: (1), The first three invocations express 
her special prerogatives: her sanctity, her divine maternity, her 
immaculate virginity; (2), Then her perfections as a Mother are 
enumerated: Mother of Christ; (3), She is next extolled in virtue 
of her virginity: Virgin most prudent, etc.; (4), Her glories are 
then depicted under a number of figures and types : Mirror of justice, 
etc.; (5), Mary is next shown in her relation to the Church Militant: 
Health of the sick, etc.; (6), And finally in her relation to the 
Church triumphant : Queen of angels, etc. At the conclusion of the 
litany, confiding in the mediation of our Advocate, we appeal to her 
divine Son, beseeching Him to spare, to hear, to have mercy upon us. 
Several of the invocations have been added by the Holy See in the 
course of centuries ; for instance, " Help of Christians " after the 
victory over the Turks ; "Queen conceived without original sin," after 
the proclamation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception; and 
recently, " Queen of the most holy Rosary," on the introduction of 
the custom of reciting the Rosary in public during the month of 
October. An indulgence of three hundred days may be gained for 
each recital of this litany. The Salve Regina or " Hail, holy Queen," 
as it is also called, was composed in 1009 by Blessed Herman, and in 
1146 the illustrious St. Bernard added to it the sweet words : " O 
clement, O pious, O sweet Virgin Mary." 



The Principal Devotional Exercises, 697 



THE PRINCIPAL DEVOTIONAL EXERCISES. 

1. There are ordinary and extraordinary practices of devotion. 

The former take place at regular, appointed times; the lat- 
ter only on special occasions. 

2. The regular services held in the parish church on Sundays 
and holydays both in the forenoon and the afternoon, as well as 
week-day services, belong to the ordinary practices of devotion. 

On Sundays and festivals, in aU parish churches, one Mass or 
several Masses, according to the size of the parish and the number 
of priests, are said one after another, at one of which a short ser- 
mon is generally preached. In the afternoon or evening, either the 
Rosary and a litany are said (the Litany of the Saints, the Litany of 
the Holy Name, the Litany of Loretto and the Litany of the Sacred 
Heart are approved by the Holy See for the public services of the 
Church, no other being allowed without the permission of the 
bishop) ; or Vespers are sung, with Benediction of the Blessed Sacra- 
ment. On week-days in almost every parish church a parochial Mass 
is said daily with afternoon or evening services, consisting generally 
of the Rosary or some other devotion, and Benediction, on one or 
more days in the week. 

3. Processions, pilgrimages, the Way of the Cross, Exposition 
of the Blessed Sacrament, and Missions, belong to the extraordi-. 
nary practices of devotion. 

Christian burial services come under the class of processions, and 
the Way of the Cross is in fact nothing more or less than visiting 
the scenes of Our Lord's Passion at Jerusalem, without leaving our 
own country. 

PROCESSIONS. 

1. Processions are a solemn religious ceremony, during which 
prayers are recited in common by those who take part in them. 

Processions were customary under the Old Dispensation. We 
read of the Ark of the Covenant being carried round about the city 
of Jericho ( Josue vi.) ; of the ark being brought in solemn procession 
to Mount Sion by King David (2 Kings vi.), and thence transferred 
to the Temple built by Solomon (3 Kings viii.) ; Our Lord also made 
a solemn entry into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday (Matt. xxi.). 

The ceremonial observed in our Christian processions is in- 
tended to portray the truth that we have not here a lasting city, 
but we seek one to come (Heb. xiii. 14). 

The procession issues (proceeds^ hence the name procession) from 
the church and returns thither, to show that we must enter the 



698 The Means of Grace. 

Church on earth if we wotild reach the Church in heaven. The cross 
is carried first, because in this life we can never be wholly free from 
crosses and sufferings, if we follow the maxims of Our Lord. The 
banners are to remind us that we are warriors, because here below 
we have constantly to contend against the malignant foe and our 
own evil proclivities. Those who walk in the procession go two and 
two, to signify the twofold precept of charity, especially that of 
charity to our neighbor. The children take the lead, because their 
greater innocence renders them more pleasing to God; the adults 
follow, first the men, with the priest in their midst, and finally the 
women. Processions, if possible, are held in the open air. The 
prayers recited vary according to the object of the procession; on 
Rogation days the Litany of the Saints is sung. By rights the men 
ought to walk bareheaded, but not so the clergy and persons in of- 
ficial dress ; this is to show the respect due to authorities both ecclesi- 
astical and civil. In the procession of Corpus Christi all heads are 
uncovered, by reason of the presence of the Blessed Sacrament. 

2. The Church holds processions either for the purpose of set- 
ting before us more forcibly certain events in the life of Christ, 
certain doctrines of the faith, or in order to obtain speedy help 
from God; on these occasions an opportunity is afforded us of 
testifying in a public manner our faith and our loyalty to the 
Church. 

The object the Church proposes in setting before us more vividly 
certain events in Our Lord's life, or certain doctrines of the faith, 
is to confirm our beliefs. Processions are a means of obtaining more 
speedy assistance from on high, because God inclines His ear more 
readily to petitions offered in common; and experience proves that 
processions are most efficacious modes of supplication. The proces- 
sions on Candlemas Day and on Palm Sunday are in remembrance 
of events in Our Lord's life; those on Holy Saturday and on the 
feast of Corpus Christi are illustrative of doctrines of the faith; 
the processions of St. Mark and of the Rogation days are for the 
purpose of entreating the divine help. 

3. The following processions form part of the ritual of the 
Church everywhere: 

The procession on the feast of the Purification. 

At this lighted tapers are carried round the church, be- 
cause on that day the aged Simeon declared the Child Jesus to 
be " a light to the revelation of the Gentiles " (Luke ii. 32). 

The wax tapers are emblematic of Christ, the Light of the world. 
The wax betokens His manhood, the flame His Godhead ; as the light 
shines forth from the taper, so the divinity of Christ shines forth 
from His sacred humanity by His teaching and His miracles; and 
as the taper is consumed, while illuminating all around, so the 
human nature of Our Lord was sacrificed for the sake of enlighten- 
ing mankind. Christ is in very truth the Light of the world, since 
by His teaching He dispels the darkness of ignorance and error. ' 



The Prmcipal Devotional Exercises, 699 

The procession on Palm Sunday. 

When blessed palms are carried round the church, in mem- 
ory of the day of Our Lord's triumphal entry into Jerusalem. 

The palm branches borne by the Jews were symbols of victory — 
the victory that Christ was to gain by His death over the devil, the 
prince of this world. Our procession is significant of the Chris- 
tian's triumphal entry into heaven. The priest knocks three times at 
the door of the church with the processional cross, then it is opened, 
to show that only through trials and tribulation can we enter the 
gate of heaven, and be admitted to the realms of bliss. 

The procession on Holy Saturday. 

When the Blessed Sacrament is solemnly taken from the 
place where it was deposited, and borne by the priest, attended 
by the clergy, back to the high altar. 

This procession is significant of our future resurrection. The 
ceremony ought by rights to take place at daybreak on Easter Day, 
but as few could then be present, it is anticipated on the eve of the 
feast. 

The procession on the feast of Corpus Christi. 

When the Blessed Sacrament is carried to one or more altars 
of repose, to testify publicly our faith in the presence of Our 
Lord in the Adorable Sacrament of the Altar. 

The festival of Corpus Christi (the body of Christ) is on the 
Thursday following Trinity Sunday, consequently in the second week 
after Pentecost, because soon after the descent of the Holy Ghost 
the apostles began to dispense holy communion to the faithful. This 
festival was instituted some six centuries ago. It was first cele- 
brated in Belgium, by order of the Bishop of Liege, in consequence of 
a revelation made to a nun, Blessed Juliana (1250), and shortly 
after Pope Urban IV. decreed that it should be kept throughout the 
whole Church. In this procession the sacred Host is carried in a 
monstrance beneath a canopy, flowers are strewn on the way, and 
censers swung; the altars of repose are beautifully decorated with 
lights and flowers in honor of the Blessed Sacrament. In some 
places four altars are erected, and a pause is made at each, and one 
of the accounts of the institution of the Blessed Sacrament given 
by the four Evangelists is read. The four altars signify the four 
quarters of the world. After the reading of the Gospel, a prayer is 
added for protection against lightning and tempest, and for a good 
harvest. This solemn ceremony, which is generally terminated by 
the Te Deum in the church, cannot fail to impress every beholder, 
and lead the non-Catholic to inquire what it is towards which such 
profound reverence and veneration is displayed- 

The procession on St. Mark's Day. 



700 The Means of Grace. 

When, in Catholic countries, the priest goes out to bless 
the fields, and prays God to grant the fruits of the earth in due 
season. 

St. Mark is commemorated on the twenty-fifth of April. The 
procession on this day owes its origin to Pope St. Gregory the Great 
about the year 600. At the time when the plague raged in Rome, 
St. Gregory ordered the procession to be held for the purpose of 
imploring the mercy of God; and immediately after the pestilence 
was stayed. 

The procession on the three Rogation days. 

The object of which is to ask of God the blessing of an 
abundant harvest. 

The Rogation days are the three days preceding the ascension 
of Our Lord. The processions were first introduced by St. Mamertus, 
Bishop of Vienne in France, about the year 470, at a season when a 
failure of crops and the damage occasioned by earthquakes had 
brought about great scarcity and destitution. 

In addition to the processions above named, there are local 
processions held yearly in honor of the patron saint of the place, 
or to some shrine in the vicinity. Sometimes processions are 
ordered by the Pope or the bishop of the diocese, as for instance, 
on occasion of a jubilee, or in seasons of great calamity. 

When the bishop visits a church, the clergy go in procession to 
meet and receive him; processions are also formed at funerals. 
Prayer is the soul of processions; he who does not go to join in the 
supplication had better remain at home. 



CHRISTIAN BURIAL. 

1. Christian burial is a solemn service accompanied by special 
ceremonies, in which the remains of a departed Catholic are car- 
ried in procession to the place of interment. 

As is usual in every procession, the cross is carried first, to denote 
that our prayers are offered in the name of the crucified Redeemer. 
The bells are tolled, psalms and funeral hymns are sung. 

2. The special ceremonies customary at Christian obsequies 
are all significant of our prayer that God may have mercy on 
the soul of the deceased. 

The lighted tapers express the desire that the departed may 
be admitted into the realms of perpetual light ; the holy water sprin- 
kled on the coffin expresses the desire that his soul may be cleansed 
from sin; the incense that is burned expresses the desire that our 
prayers on his behalf may ascend to the throne of the Most High, 



Fhe Principal Devotional Exercises, 701 

even as the clouds of smoke roll upward. A requiem Mass is generally- 
celebrated at funerals, and sometimes an oration is delivered, to invite 
the mourners to pray for the departed. If the body is not present, a 
catafalque occupies the place of the coffin. The ceremonies observed at 
the obsequies of a child under seven years of age are such as express joy 
and gladness; white vestments are worn by the priest. The wreaths 
placed on the coffin are supposed to represent the victor's crown 
gained by the departed. The present custom of loading the coffin 
and covering the grave with costly floral decorations of every size 
and shape is greatly to be deprecated; it is a waste of money that 
had far better be given to the poor, or expended on Masses for the 
repose of the departed. St. Augustine expressly says that unneces- 
sary display should be avoided at funerals. The soul of the de- 
parted can surely reap no benefit from what is reprehensible. 

3. Christian obsequies are conducted with so much solem- 
nity, because it is well pleasing to God that we should show 
reverence to the mortal remains of those who have departed this 
life in the grace of God. 

It is becoming to treat the human body with respect after death, 
for during our lifetime our bodies are sacred, as being the abode and 
instrument of the soul which is made to God's image. They are also 
the temple of the Holy Ghost, and to be held in honor for God's sake. 
Moreover the burial of the dead is a work of mercy which is not with- 
out its reward. Remember how Tobias acted. In the early days of 
Christianity persons of the highest position, even Popes, did not con- 
sider it demeaning themselves to carry the remains of the martyrs 
in their arms to the graves, and bury them with their own hands. 
In the days of persecution the place of burial was in the Catacombs, 
where the holy sacrifice was offered. Hence it came to pass that in 
later times the dead were buried in the crypts of churches, or in the 
ground surrounding the church, which is called the churchyard. This 
custom is now abolished, on sanitary grounds, cemeteries being situ- 
ated on the outskirts of towns for the most part. An exaggerated idea 
as to the unhealthiness of intramural sepulture has contributed to 
the introduction of the unnatural and pagan custom of cremation. 
Xo danger to the living may be apprehended from the proximity of 
a burial-ground, provided the graves are of a proper depth, for earth 
is knoAvn to be the best possible disinfectant. 

4. Cremation is condemned by the Church as being an 
abominable abuse. 

Originally the custom of interring the dead in the ground was 
common to all nations, for the most ancient human remains that have 
been discovered bear no signs of having been subjected to fire. Vaults 
containing skeletons have also been met with, closed by a slab of stone. 
We know that the Jews buried their dead ; Holy Scripture constantly 
speaks of the burial of kings and prophets. That his corpse should 
be left unburied was a chastisement threatened to the transgressor 
(Deut. xxviii. 26). Only during a time of pestilence were the Jews 
allowed to burn individual corpses (Amos vi. 10). The Romans in 



703 The Means of Grace, 

earlier times buried their dead. Cicero tells us that their graves were 
considered as sacred, and the profanation of a tomb was severely- 
punished, even by the loss of a hand. Bodies were often deposited in 
sarcophagi, where they were reduced to dust. Pliny records that the 
Romans only burned their dead when they feared they might be out- 
raged by the enemy. In later times when manners became corrupt, 
cremation was practised among them. The custom of embalming the 
dead prevailed among the Egyptians. It is a noteworthy fact that 
all barbarous nations, who in an uncivilized state burned their dead, 
substituted the grave for the funeral pyre as soon as civilization shed 
its light in their land. Christianity did, in fact, abolish cremation. 
But in these days, when Christian faith is on the decrease, crema- 
tion is once more becoming the fashion. St. Augustine denounces 
the practice as horrible and barbarous. It offends our Christian in- 
stincts. For we are taught to regard death as a sleep ; the dead sleep 
in Christ (1 Cor. xv. 18), for they will rise again; they are laid to 
rest in peace, and the idea of the repose they enjoy is connected with 
the churchyard, not with the crematorium. When we commit our 
dead to the kindly earth, we tacitly express our belief that our body 
is like a seed, which is cast into the ground, to germinate and spring- 
up. " It is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption " (1 Cor. 
XV. 42). As Christians we have a higher esteem for the soul, which 
partakes of the divine nature, and consequently for the body, which 
is the servant and tool of the soul. No true Christian can fail to 
shrink from the horrors of cremation; only those who are lost to all 
sense of the dignity of human nature, to all belief in the truths of 
religion, can desire it for themselves. Let us remember that Christ, 
our great Exemplar, was laid in the tomb and rose again. For 
pagans such considerations naturally have no weight; they disliked 
the sight of the sepulchral monument, the mound raised over the 
dead, because it reminded them of death, which would put an end 
to their earthly enjoyments. For the same reason unbelievers in our 
own day advocate cremation. Burial suggests to them too strongly 
the immortality of the soul, whereas cremation appears to promise 
the annihilation that they desire as their portion after death. Yet 
let no one imagine that the Christian dreads the destruction of the 
body by fire as an impediment to its future resurrection, for God 
can effect the reintegration of the body after it has been dissolved into 
gaseous elements. In the interests of justice destruction of the 
body by fire is highly reprehensible, since, if a body is buried, it can 
be afterwards exhumed if this is necessary for the detection of a crime, 
such as murder. By this means many a murderer has been brought 
to justice; after cremation this is impossible. Those therefore who 
speak in favor of cremation befriend criminals, inasmuch as they aid 
in the removal of all traces of their crime. 

5. Christian burial is denied to the imbaptized, to non-Cath- 
olics, and to Catholics who are known to have died in mortal 
sin. 

Catholics to whom Christian burial is denied are: Suicides (un- 
less they are insane at the time of death and therefore irresponsible) ; 
duellists, and any persons who obstinately refuse to receive the last 



The Principal Devotional Exercises 703 

sacraments, or who have not for years past fulfilled the Easter precept. 
In the two last cases the matter is generally laid before the bishop. 
The denial of Christian burial to bad Catholics is not intended as a 
sentence of damnation, but merely as the public expression of abhor- 
rence of their sin, and for the purpose of deterring others from falling 
into the same sin. An association would be little thought of if one 
of its members followed to the grave a fellow-member who had been 
a disgrace to that society; so it would be derogatory to the Church 
and her ministers if she were to celebrate the obsequies of an un- 
faithful Catholic. The Church also refuses ecclesiastical burial to 
non-Catholics, because she holds to the principle expressed by Pope 
Innocent III. in the words : " It is impossible for us to hold com- 
munion after their death with those who have not been in communion 
with us during their life. To do so would give rise to the idea that all 
religions were alike. It would destroy the prestige of the Church, 
and injure the souls of men. The maxim of the Church is that the 
ground she has consecrated is the last resting-place of her children, 
and none but members of her family have a right to be interred 
therein." Yet she permits non-Catholic relatives to be laid in a 
family vault. For suicides a portion of the cemetery which has not 
been consecrated is set apart. 



PILGRIMAGES, 

1. Pilgrimages are journeys made to sacred places, where God 
oftentimes vouchsafes to give miraculous assistance to the sup- 
pliant. 

The Jews were accustomed to make pilgrimages; on the three 
principal solemnities of the year, the Paschal feast, the feast of 
Weeks, and the feast of Tabernacles, all the men had to go up to the 
Temple at Jerusalem. Thus we read that Our Lord, when twelve 
years old, went on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem (Luke ii. 41). 

2. The places of pilgrimage are either the holy places in 
Palestine, spots sacred to the holy apostles, or shrines of the 
blessed Mother of God. 

The principal places of pilgrimage in the Holy Land are: 
The scene of the crucifixion and the holy sepulchre on Calvary 
at Jerusalem; the place where Christ was bom in Bethlehem, 
and the place of the annunciation at Xazareth. 

The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is situated on Mount Calvary ; 
it consists of three separate churches, called respectively the Church 
of the Crucifixion, the Church of the Ascension, and that of the 
Invention of the True Cross; all are under one roof. The early 
Christians journeyed thither in great numbers ; in order to deter them 
from doing this, the Emperor Hadrian erected a heathen temple in 
the holy places, about one hundred years after Our Lord's death. 
About the year 325 the Empress Helena, mother of Constantine the 
Great, discovered the cross of Christ; this gave a fresh impetus to 



704 The Means of Grace, 

the pilgrimages. The Emperor Charlemagne erected a hospice close 
to the Holy Sepulchre for the accommodation of pilgrims to Jerusa- 
lem. In the ninth century the Saracens conquered the Holy Land; 
the crusades undertaken to recover it from them were nothing less 
than heroic pilgrimages. In the fifteenth century pilgrimages to the 
Holy Land again became frequent, but in Luther's time the number 
of those whose piety prompted them to undertake what was then a 
long and toilsome journey greatly diminished. 

The principal places of pilgrimage in honor of the holy apos- 
tles are: The tomb of the princes of the apostles in Rome, and 
the tomb of St. James at Compostella. 

The remains of St. Peter rest in the Church of St. Peter in 
Rome, the largest church in Christendom, of world-wide renown; it 
was a hundred and ten years in building, and was finished in 1626. 
The remains of St. Paul are laid in the church dedicated to him 
outside the walls of the city. 

Some of the principal places of pilgrimage sacred to the 
Mother of God are: Lonrdes in France, Loretto in Italy, Maria- 
Zell in Hungary, Einsiedeln in Switzerland, Altotting in Ba- 
varia, Kevelaer in the Ehineland. 

Lourdes is situated in the south of France on the slope of the 
Pyrenees. It was there that, in 1858, the Mother of God appeared 
in a grotto to a little peasant girl named Bernadette, and intimated 
to her her desire that a church should be built on the spot, and that 
pilgrims should go thither in procession. Our Lady proclaimed 
herself to be the Immaculate Conception. From that time forward 
a spring has flowed out of the grotto, the water of which has been 
the means of healing thousands of sick persons. No less than one 
hundred and twenty thousand bottles of this water are annually sent 
out into all parts of the world ; and the number of pilgrims who visit 
the shrine can only be counted by millions. They come from the 
remotest quarters of the world. Loretto in Ancona has, since 1295, 
possessed the holy house of Nazareth, where our blessed Lady lived. 
This lowly house was seen in the year 1252 by St. Louis in Nazareth ; 
forty years later it suddenly appeared at Tersato in Dalmatia ; thence 
it was miraculously transferred to Ancona, and finally found a per- 
manent resting-place at Loretto. There is no doubt that it was 
carried to these various spots by the angels. An altar which was 
miraculously conveyed thither at the same time, is supposed to be that 
upon which St. Peter offered the holy sacrifice. The statue of Our 
Lady which stands on that altar, carved in cedar-wood, three feet 
in height, is said to be the work of St. Luke. A spacious church 
has been erected over the holy house; copies of the latter have been 
made, and are seen in several places. At Loretto Pope Pius in his 
youth was cured of apoplexy. The most eminent saints are known 
to have made pilgrimages thither; and the number of pilgrims who 
visit it yearly is computed at five hundred thousand. The place of 
pilgrimage known as Maria-Zell owes its origin to the Benedictine 
monks. About the commencement of the thirteenth century atten- 



The Principal Devotional Exercises. 705 

tion was attracted to it by the miracles wrought there. King Louis 
I. of Hungary built a large church at Maria-Zell, in thanksgiving 
for the victory he gained over the Turks in 1363, with an army im- 
mensely inferior in numbers, which he attributed to the intercession 
of Our Lady. Einsiedeln was originally the humble dwelling of the 
hermit St. Meinrad, a priest and Benedictine, a scion of the house 
of Hohenzollern. In 861 he was slain in his forest solitude by rob- 
bers; later on a church was built on the site of his hermitage, in 
which an ancient and venerated image of Our Lady was preserved. 
While the bishop who came to consecrate the church was watching 
in the sacred edifice during the night preceding the appointed day, 
he beheld Our Lord Himself perform the ceremony, attended by 
saints and angels, amid the chanting of celestial choirs. In conse- 
quence of this vision, both he, and his successors in the see, with the 
Papal sanction, desisted from any attempt to consecrate the church. 
This circumstance, together with the canonization of Meinrad, whose 
remains were interred at Einsiedeln, and the numerous miracles 
which were wrought there, brought the spot into great repute as a pil- 
grimage. During the French revolution the church was burned 
down, the miraculous image alone escaping injury. The shrine at 
Altotting dates from a somewhat earlier period, the church having 
been built by St. Rupert, the Apostle of Bavaria, in 700. A Bene- 
dictine monastery was afterwards erected there. Thousands of pil- 
grims visits the shrine. That of Kevelaer on the Rhine was built in 
1642 by a citizen of Geldem, who while at prayer heard a voice com- 
manding him to raise a sanctuary in honor of Our Lady. The num- 
ber of pilgrims, principally from the adjacent country, who annually 
visit Kevelaer is also very great. 

3. The object for which, as a rule, Christian people visit places 
of pilgrimage, is to beseech the divine assistance in season of deep 
affliction, or to fulfil a vow. 

When Dom Bosco was cruelly persecuted on account of his efforts 
to instruct the neglected youth of Turin, and he was at a loss what 
course to pursue, he made a pilgrimage, and obtained the aid he 
sought in an unexpected and marvellous manner. God hears our 
petitions more quickly in places of pilgrimage ; they are the audience 
chamber of the King of kings; there graces are lavishly bestowed. 
Many sick persons make a vow to undertake a pilgrimage if they are 
restored to health; the number of ex votos on the walls of these sanc- 
tuaries afford evidence of the frequency with which suppliants ob- 
tain their cure. 

4. A visit to some place of pilgrimage leads many to a com- 
plete amendment of life. 

The pilgrim on his way to a shrine forgets his worldly cares, and 
is more diligent in prayer; when he arrives at his destination he 
makes his confession to a strange priest, and under the influence of 
the Holy Spirit, makes perhaps a better confession. Pilgrimages 
are works of penance ; they are fatiguing and often expensive. They 
are also public professions of faith, for no one would undertake them 
without deep religious convictions. Thus many actual graces are 



706 The Means of Grace. 

obtained by the devout pilgrim. In former times they were fre- 
quently enjoined as penances; sometimes indeed they were abused, 
and made occasions of sinning* more freely, hence the saying : " The 
more of a pilgrim, the less of a saint." But what is in itself good 
must not be rejected because it is sometimes abused; who would 
condemn the use of wine, because occasionally a man gets drunk? 
St. Jerome says : " It is no great praise to have seen Jerusalem, but 
it is very great praise to have offered pious and devout prayers within 
its walls." 



TEE WAY OF THE CROSS. 

It is said that the Way of the Cross owes its origin to the 
Mother of God. 

Tradition says that the Blessed Mother of God was wont often to 
walk in the steps of her Son to Calvary, pausing at the spots marked 
by some special incident. The early Christians flocked in crowds 
to the holy places to follow the Via Cruets. But when, in the Middle 
Ages, the Holy Land fell into the hands of the infidels, and the de- 
vout pilgrim could only visit the scenes of Our Lord's sufferings at 
the risk of his life, the stations were erected in churches, and en- 
riched by the Popes with large indulgences. St. Francis of Assisi 
contributed greatly to spread this devotion. 

1. The Way of the Cross is the name given to the fourteen 
stations which depict the way along which Our Redeemer passed, 
bearing His cross, from Pilate's palace to Mount Calvary. 

The fourteen stations consist of fourteen wooden crosses, to which 
pictures and inscriptions are generally added. They are erected in 
churches, sometimes in the open air, on the slope of a hill; occasion- 
ally in cemeteries. 

2. The manner of performing the Way of the Cross is to 
go from one station to another, making meanwhile a meditation 
on Our Lord's Passion. 

It is not necessary to go from station to station in the church if 
one stands up and kneels down as every station is being made. It 
is enough to meditate on the Passion in general, without making a 
special meditation at each station. An Our Father, Hail Mary, and 
an act of contrition are generally recited at every one. 

3. By performing the Way of the Cross large indulgences 
may be gained; we also obtain contrition for sin and are in- 
cited to the practice of virtue. 

Daily meditation on the Passion of Christ is more profitable than 
fasting every Friday in the year on bread and water, or taking the 
discipline to blood. A single tear shed in compassion for Our Lord's 
sufferings is of greater value in God's sight than a pilgrimage to the 
Holy Land. We learn how acceptable meditation on His Passion is 



The Principal Devotional Exercises. 707 

to Our Lord, from the revelations of St. Bridget. Our Lord once 
appeared to her, with blood streaming from all His wounds. She 
asked what had reduced Him to this pitiable condition? He an- 
swered : " It is the doing of those who never consider the great love 
I manifested towards them by all I suffered upon the cross." It was 
as a continual memorial of His Passion that Our Lord instituted 
the holy sacrifice of the Mass. The same indulgences are gra)ited 
for making the Way of the Cross as for visiting the corresponding 
places in the Holy Land. What the indulgences are we do not know 
precisely; let us be content to know that they are great and numer- 
ous; they can however only be gained once in the day. The wooden 
crosses must be blessed by a Franciscan, or some priest who has the 
requisite powers, and the stations must be visited without any break. 
The Way of the Cross is a means of obtaining the grace of contrition. 
As the Israelites who were bitten by the fiery serpents were healed 
by looking upon the brazen serpent, so sinners are healed of the deadly 
wound of sin by frequent meditation on the Passion of Christ. 
The Way of the Cross is also an incentive to the practice of virtue. 
The saints often tell us that meditation on Our Lord's Passion im- 
parts strength to suffer not merely with patience, but with joy. Our 
arrogance, our avarice, our anger will be cured by the humility, the 
poverty, the patience of the Son of God. If, O man, you would 
progress from virtue to virtue, contemplate with all possible devotion 
the sufferings of your Lord, for this is most conducive to sanctity. 

4. If we are prevented from making the Way of the Cross, 
we can gain the indulgence by reciting the Our Father, Hail 
Mary, and the Gloria twenty times, holding meanwhile a cru- 
cifix blessed for the stations in our hand. 

The hindrances must be of a sufficient nature, such as long dis- 
tance from a church, sickness, etc. The cross for performing the 
stations at home must be of strong material, with the figure of the 
Saviour attached to it, and must have been duly blessed for the pur- 
pose. The indulgences are not gained if the crucifix is not the 
property of the individual using it ; but if several persons perform the 
devotion together, it is enough for one to hold in his hand the cross. 
For the sick it suffices to take the cross in the hand and make an act 
of contrition. The Our Father, Hail Mary and Glory be to the 
Father are recited fourteen times for the fourteen stations, five times 
in honor of the five wounds of Our Lord and once for the Holy 
Father. If the cross has been blessed by a Redemptionist the prayers 
need only be repeated fourteen times. 



EXPOSITION OF THE MOST HOLY SACRAMENT, 

1. The solemn exposition of the Most Holy Sacrament con- 
sists in placing the sacred Host in a monstrance, unveiled, at 
some height above the altar for the adoration of the faithful. 

In the early ages of Christianity the Blessed Sacrament was con- 
cealed as much r.s possible from sight, lest the unbaptized might 



708 The Means of Grace, 

conceive contempt for the Christian mysteries. Public exposition 
was not introduced until after the institution of the feast of Corpus 
Christi. The number of lighted tapers must not be less than twelve. 
The mere opening of the tabernacle is not a solemn exposition; every 
parish priest may do that on his own authority. 

2. Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament generally takes place 
on these occasions: After the parochial Mass, at the afternoon 
services on Sundays and festivals, on Holy Thursday on the 
altar of repose, on the feast of Corpus Christi. The bishop of the 
diocese often orders an exposition to be held for some reason 
of local or general interest; such as a public calamity, the 
dangerous sickness of the ruler of the land or of the Holy 
Father, etc. 

MISSIONS AND RETREATS. 

1. Missions are a course of sermons and other religious exer- 
cises conducted by able priests, for the purpose of giving a fresh 
impetus to the spiritual life of a community or congregation. 

The home missions are quite distinct from foreign missions; 
they are held for the most parti by Religious, the Jesuit, Redemptor- 
ist, or Lazarist Fathers, who are specially trained for the work, since 
the constitutions of their Order specify giving missions as part of 
the duties of their calling. These missions effect an immense amount 
of good. Being something out of the common, they make more 
impression on the parishioners, and the sermons coming close upon 
one another, exercise a potent and gentle influence on the heart, as 
a soft spring rain does upon the dry soil. The Holy Ghost speaking 
through the mouth of His servants imparts to their words an unction 
calculated to soften the hardest heart. Many persons also make their 
confession more freely to a priest who is a complete stranger to them. 
Missions are generally seasons of grace to a parish ; how many feuds 
are ended, disputes settled, bad habits eradicated ; how often is resti- 
tution made of property wrongfully acquired, how many souls are 
won for God, sinners converted and just persons incited to progress 
in virtue ! 

2. Retreats have much the same effect as missions. 

Retreats, or the spiritual exercises, consist of a series of discourses 
and religious services held in convents or any other place, for a 
certain class of persons, whether priests, teachers, or men and 
women living in the world. The retreat ends with the reception of 
the sacraments. The exercises, which require the retreat ant to labor 
with greater fervor at the work of his salvation, conduce signally to 
quicken faith and inspire morals. A clock, although it is wound up 
daily, after a time needs to be cleaned and repaired; it is the same 
with the soul, it must ever and anon be stimulated to increased exer- 
tion by the spiritual exercises. The saints were wont to withdraw 
into solitude for a time; Our Lord Himself spent forty days in the 



The Principal Devotional Exercises. 709 

desert. The Holy See has frequently urged upon the faithful to make 
diligent use of the spiritual exercises. 



CATHOLIC CONGRESSES AND PASSION PLAYS, 

Catholic congresses and Passion plays contribute largely in 
the present day to the revival of faith in Christendom. 

1. Catholic congresses are public meetings of Catholics for 
the purpose of taking counsel together and passing resolutions 
suited to the times and to the present needs of the Church. 

These congresses are either general or provincial, according 
as the Catholics of a whole kingdom or only of a single State 
take part in them. 

Ever since the year 1848 the Catholics of Germany have held 
annual congresses in one or other of the chief towns of the land. In 
other countries their example has been followed; general congresses 
are now a common occurrence both on the continent of Europe and 
also in England and the United States of America. Provincial meet- 
ings of a local interest are also frequently held in various places. 

The object of Catholic congresses is not in any wise to con- 
trol or take part in the government of the Church, but only to 
support those whose office it is to govern her. 

The bishops alone possess authority to rule the Church of God. 
Hence those who proposed and arranged these assemblies of Catholics, 
remembering the saying of St. Ignatius of Antioch : " Let nothing be 
done without the bishop," took no steps without previously obtain- 
ing the sanction and blessing of the Holy Father and of the bishops 
on their scheme. Nor have these congresses ever interfered with the 
direction of ecclesiastical matters ; they have merely been instrumen- 
tal in carrying out Christian principles ; their members are a militia 
under episcopal command. Consequently the bishops have always 
highly approved of congresses and attended them in person. 

These public meetings of Catholics are of great utility to the 
Church; they have been instrumental in founding sodalities 
adapted to meet the needs of the day, in promoting unity and 
concord among Catholics, in inspiring them \vith courage and 
confirming their convictions, in increasing the prestige of the 
Church, and gaining for her greater liberty of action. 

Every one who has been present at a Catholic congress will have 
perceived what enthusiasm is evoked by the forcible addresses of the 
different speakers, how faith is kindled inwardly and manifested out- 
wardly. And from the remarks of the anti-Catholic press, it may be 
seen how these congresses win respect even from the enemies of the 
Church by their vigorous protests and energetic action. The work 
of these congresses has been said to be to pull down the edifice of 



710 The Means of Grace. 

modern paganism stone by stone, and raise in its place a noble 
basilica. 

2. Passion play is the name given to the portrayal of Our 
Lord's Passion, and other biblical events in a series of tableaux 
vivants. 

In the Middle Ages, before the invention of printing had placed 
Holy Scripture within the reach of the people, it was customary to 
present to their view the chief events of Our Lord's life in theatric 
representations. For instance, St. Francis of Assisi obtained the 
Papal permission to construct a stable of brushwood and moss in the 
midst of a pine-wood. In it he placed a real manger in which was 
laid an image of the divine Infant, while figures representing Mary 
and Joseph stood beside it. A real ox and an ass were tied up to a 
stall outside the stable ; inside an altar was erected, at which at mid- 
night the Christmas Mass was solemnly celebrated, St. Francis serv- 
ing as deacon, to the great edification of the crowds who flocked from 
all parts round to witness the unwonted spectacle. From that time 
forth the custom of making a crib in churches began to prevail. In 
the Middle Ages, pains were taken to make representations of this 
description as picturesque and true to nature as possible; scenes 
from the life of Our Lord or other scriptural personages were repre- 
sented on the stage in tableaux. The subject of these religious 
dramas or miracle-plays as they were called, was generally adapted 
to the season of the ecclesiastical year in which they were performed. 
At first they were enacted in the church, the actors speaking in Latin ; 
later on they were given in the open air, and the vernacular was used. 
In the fourteenth century these sacred dramas were customary in al- 
most every village in France and Germany, but owing to abuses hav- 
ing arisen, they were strictly prohibited by the Holy See. In 1633 
they were however revived at Oberammergau, in Bavaria, in conse- 
quence of a vow made by the inhabitants to perform a Passion play 
every ten years if they were delivered from a pestilence which was 
ravaging the village. This Passion play, as well as two others in the 
Tyrol, has acquired a world-wide renown. It is performed with won- 
derful skill by the peasants, and in a spirit of heartfelt piety and 
recollection. Experience proves that far from being, as some allege, 
a profanation of holy things, the representation of the solemn scenes 
of Our Loid's sacred Passion has the effect of impressing and touch- 
ing the spectators, inspiring feelings of devotion, and elevating the 
heart so that the actors are forgotten in the entrancing interest of 
the scenes enacted. Besides, the gracious answer to the petition of the 
people of Oberammergau ought to silence the objector, for that cannot 
be reprehensible of which God manifests His approval in so signal a 
manner. 



RELIGIOUS ASSOCIATIONS. 

The Church makes use of religious associations as a further 
means of promoting the salvation of souls. 



Heligious Associatio7is, 711 

In the present day, when the enemies of the Church are so numeri- 
cally strong, it behooves her loyal children to form, as it were, into 
ranks, and with united forces to withstand the foe. Only in this 
wise can victory be ensured. *' Few men," says Mirabeau, " acting 
conjointly, can make a hundred thousand isolated individuals trem- 
ble." This language may appear somewhat exaggerated, but there 
is much truth in it. Union is strength. We cannot raise a weight 
with a single thread ; but a twisted cord is not easily broken. 

1. Religious associations are voluntary societies formed 
among the faithful, with the object of furthering their own 
salvation or the salvation of their fellow-men. 

Religious associations have much the same aim as secular associa- 
tions; the object of the latter is to promote their own earthly advan- 
tage "or the public weal ; that of the former to promote in the first 
place their own spiritual interests or those of their fellow-men, and 
for the most part, as a secondary consideration, the temporal welfare 
of their neighbor. 

2. Religious associations may be divided into confraternities 
or sodalities, and charitable societies. 

Confraternities are, as a rule, exclusively for purposes of 
devotion; charitable societies are for the relief of the spiritual 
and temporal needs of others. 

Thus the members of confraternities make their own spiritual ad- 
vancement their primary aim, while charitable societies seek the 
good of their neighbor. Religious societies have nothing to do 
with politics; but friendly intercourse and innocent amusements 
are encouraged as a means of promoting the main object of the 
association, and preventing the members from taking part in undesir- 
able dissipation. 

3. Religious associations are in all spiritual matters subject 
to episcopal authority; in some countries the legislat^.re exer- 
cises a certain control over them. 

In all that concerns religion, the Church has exclusive right over 
confraternities and sodalities. Only the bishop, or the general of 
an Order has power to erect them; and their rules must be sub- 
mitted to him for approval, unless they have been already approved 
by the Holy See. To the bishop it belongs to direct the devotional 
exercises of the confraternity, to prohibit anything peculiar or ex- 
traordinary. It is for him to prescribe the manner in which funds 
are to be raised, and how they are to be expended when collected. He 
can attend their meetings or send some one to represent him ; he can 
also appoint the parish priest to be director of the confraternity. It is 
also necessary to obtain ecclesiastical sanction for the forming of 
charitable societies. 

4. The formation of religious associations has always been 
highly commended by the Holy See, and large indulgences have 



712 The Means of Grace. 

been granted to them, because they are of great benefit both to 
the individual members and to the community in general. 

Our Holy Father, Leo XIII., in his encyclicals of 1884 and 1891, 
expressed high approval of religious associations, especially of the 
Society of St. Vincent of Paul, and the guilds of artisans and work- 
ingmen. Pope Pius IX. says they are an army set in battle array, 
to combat the adversaries of the faith, not with the clash of arms, 
but with the silent weapons of prayer. Confraternities may be com- 
pared to Noe's ark, because persons living in the world seek in them 
a refuge from the rising tide of crime and corruption. The members 
of these confraternities, as a rule, lead a more devout and well-ordered 
life than the rest of the world. They are not as apt to neglect prayer, 
because their rule prescribes certain prayers to be recited daily; they 
approach the sacraments more frequently, because days are marked 
for them on which a plenary indulgence may be gained; they learn 
obedience because they submit to the decisions of their director. They 
spend more time in religious exercises than in running after excite- 
ment and worldly amusements, and the observance of the regulations 
cultivates in them a salutary habit of self-restraint. They tend to 
keep up a high standard of faith and morals in the parish to which 
they belong, and by their good example lead others to frequent the 
sacraments. They assist in the diffusion of good and useful books; 
they all contribute their mite for ecclesiastical purposes; for the 
most part, they discharge the obligations of their calling with con- 
scientious regularity, and the parish priest often finds them a great 
help in the duties of this office. And if some members give scandal, 
the rules of the confraternity are not to blame, but the neglect of 
them; and it must be remembered that cockle always grows among 
the wheat. Charitable societies are also most useful. Through com- 
bined action with those who are likeminded with themselves, the 
members are encouraged to profess their faith openly and carry into 
practice the maxims of the Gospel, and be ready to take part in all 
good works. It is remarked that in parishes where there are no con- 
fraternities or sodalities, religion is generally at a low ebb. 

5. There is this advantage in such associations, that the rules 
enjoining the performance of certain good works are not bind- 
ing under pain of sin. 

St. Francis of Sales was a member of several confraternities ; he 
gave as a reason for this that one might gain much from them, and 
lose nothing. However, if the rules are not observed, the indul- 
gences and graces are lost; this is often the case if one joins too 
many confraternities. Let no one think it is a mark of predestination 
to be inscribed in the books of a number of societies, for by a holy 
life alone can we hope for heaven. 

6. Third Orders are, however, in every way more important 
than ordinary religious associations. 

The Third Order is not to be classed with confraternities, as it 
is affiliated to one of the great monastic Orders. " The religious 



Religious Associations. 713 

state," says St. Alphonsus, "is preferable to all the dignities and 
riches of the world." 



TEE THIRD ORDER OF ST. FRANCIS. 

1. The Third Order was founded by St. Francis of Assisi 
for the sake of seculars, in order that, by the observance of cer- 
tain rules, they might, while still living in the world, attain 
speedily and easily to sanctity of life. 

After St. Francis of Assisi had already founded the Orders of 
the Friars Minor and of the Poor Clares, he was requested by a 
wealthy Italian merchant to furnish him with a rule, by following 
which he would be enabled to lead a holy life, although his calling 
obliged him to hold constant intercourse with men of the world. 
The saint gave him a rule, which was soon adopted by other per- 
sons. Thus the Third Order of St. Francis originated about the year 
1220. Its members lived in the world and wore a gray habit fas- 
tened round the waist by a cord. This Third Order was, with some 
alterations, confirmed by the Holy See, and spread rapidly throughout 
Christendom. It is intended for those who live in the world and 
are not of the world. 

2. The Third Order is distinguished from ordinary confra- 
ternities by the fact that its members are entitled to wear a 
habit, and are subject to a religious superior. 

Tertiaries, i.e., members of the Third Order, wear a small scapular 
under their upper garment, as a part of the religious dress, and a 
cord as a girdle, a token of penance. These things are given to the 
postulant when he is clothed ; no one is admitted before the completion 
of the fourteenth year of his age; he must also be of good morals 
and a peaceful disposition. After a year of probation, he is pro- 
fessed ; that is he takes a solemn promise to keep the law of God and 
the rule of the Order with all fidelity. The director of the Third 
Order is a Franciscan monk, appointed to the office by the general of 
the Franciscan Order. This post, which gives power to receive new 
members, to give dispensations, to examine aspirants, to exercise 
supervision over the professed, may also be filled by a secular priest, 
appointed by the provincial. In every parish there is a Zelator, 
whose duty it is to see that the members live conformably to the 
spirit of the rule. 

3. The Third Order is distinguished from the First and 
Second Orders, because it does not impose the obligation of 
keeping the evangelical counsels, but only the commandments 
of the Gospel ; moreover the rules of the Order are not binding 
under pain of sin. 

The obligations of the rule are very light. They were consid- 
erably mitigated in 1883 by Pope Leo XIII. and adapted to the re- 
quirements of the times. The rule enjoins upon the tertiaries: 



714 The Means of Grace. 

"To obey God's commandments and the precepts of the Church; to 
avoid faction and quarrelling, to observe moderation in food, drink 
and clothing; to avoid luxury, to refrain as far as they can from the 
dangerous seductions of dances and the theatre." They are also 
required to fast on the eve of the feast of St. Francis and of the 
Immaculate Conception, to approach the sacraments every month, 
to recite twelve Paters, Aves and Glorias daily, to hear Mass, if 
possible, every day, to attend the monthly meetings, to assist those 
of their fellow-members who are sick or destitute, and to pray for 
deceased members. Any one who is unable to perform one or more 
of these obligations can be dispensed. Special privileges are con- 
ceded to priests. 

4. The members of the Third Order have greater graces 
within their reach than the members of almost any other exist- 
ing confraternity. 

They can gain a plenary indulgence, on the ordinary conditions, 
once a month on any day they may choose, on the day of the monthly 
meeting, besides some other days, and in the hour of death. Once 
a month, by reciting six Pater Nosters, Ave Marias and Glorias, they 
may obtain the indulgences of the holy places in Rome, Jerusalem, 
Compostella and the Portiuncula. These, and many other rich in- 
dulgences attached to various prayers and good works, are all ap- 
plicable to the couls in Purgatory. Every Mass said for a departed 
member has the indulgence of a privileged altar. The Third Order 
enjoys the benefit of the intercession of many eminent saints be- 
longing to the Order, especially that of their holy father, St. Fran- 
cis; the members are all assisted by the prayers of the numerous 
saints of the Franciscan Order and of the Poor Clares before the 
throne of God. 

5. The Third Order has counted among its members many 
distinguished personages and eminent saints. 

It would be impossible to enumerate in these pages the crowned 
heads, the saints and servants of God whose names are familiar to 
all Christians, who have been enrolled in the Third Order of St. 
Francis. Our Holy Father Leo XIII. is, and his predecessor in the 
Chair of Peter was, a tertiary of this Order. " If this Order were 
once more to flourish among us as it did in days of yore," are the 
words of our Holy Father, "the lawless greed for temporal things 
would be weakened, men would obey their lawful rulers, they would 
learn to conquer their natural propensities to evil, they would out- 
rage no one's rights, and the relations between rich and poor would 
be satisfactorily arranged." By means of the Third Order of St. 
Francis the kingdom of God would triumph upon earth, and the 
kingdom of Satan be overthrown. 



THE MORE WTDESPEEAD CONFEATEJRNITIES. 

"No confraternity can be established in a parish without the per- 
mission of the bishop; affiliation to an archconfratemity is also 
necessary. 



ReUgiotis Associations. 715 

1. The object of the Society for the Propagation of the 
Faith is to aid and support the work of missions to the heathen 
by means of prayer and alms. 

The members of this confraternity are required to recite one Our 
Father and Hail Mary daily with the invocation : " St. Francis 
Xavier, pray for us!" and to pay a small weekly or monthly sum. 
Among the indulgences granted to the members of this confraternity, 
the principal is a plenary indulgence on any two days in the month 
which they may choose, and one in the hour of death. This work 
was founded in 1822 in Lyons, where it still has its centre. The con- 
tributions amount to nearly two million dollars annually, half of 
which sum is collected in France, chiefly from the working classes. 
In the course of forty years no less than one hundred and fifty epis- 
copal sees have been erected in different parts of the world and mil- 
lions of heathen have been converted to the faith of Christ. Some 
say : " There are plenty of poor at home." Let these remember that 
there is no work so meritorious as one which contributes to the sal- 
vation of souls, or one to which such abundant blessings are prom- 
ised. 

2. The object of the Confraternity of the Child Jesus is 
to provide funds to enable missioners to receive and educate 
in a Christian manner heathen children who are abandoned by 
their parents. 

The members of this association are required to recite a Hail 
Mary daily, with the prayer : " O Blessed Virgin Mary, pray for us 
and for the unhappy heathen children." No one is admitted into this 
association who is not under twenty-one years of age. Oftentimes 
a mother will enrol her child in this confraternity, and herself per- 
form the obligations attached to it; thus by helping to rescue an 
unknown child from eternal destruction, she obtains a special bless- 
ing for her own offspring. This association was originally founded 
in China, where sickly children or those of whom their parents 
would fain be rid, are ruthlessly exposed and left to perish. 

3. The object of the Confraternity of St. Michael is to as- 
sist the Supreme Pontiff by the prayers and alms of the faithful. 

The members of this association are required to recite one Our 
Father, one Hail Mary and the Creed daily for the intentions of 
the Holy Father, and to contribute not less than twenty-five cents 
yearly to the Peter's Pence. This confraternity is under the pro- 
tection of the archangel St. Michael. A plenary indulgence is 
granted to the members in the hour of death. 

4. The object of the Confraternity of the Blessed Sacrament 
is the adoration of the Most Holy Sacrament of the Altar. 

In the present day the Confraternity of the Perpetual Adoration 
is being widely propagated. Each member pledges himself to spend 
an hour every month in adoration of the Blessed Sacrament. The 



716 The Means of Grace, 

members watch in turn, generally on Sundays or holydays. The 
chief indulgences are a plenary indulgence once a month, the day 
being optional ; on the first Thursday in the month ; on the feast of 
Corpus Christi or in the octave; on the five principal feasts of Our 
Lady, besides other festivals, and in the hour of death. It is meet 
that Our Lord, present under the eucharistic veils, should be per- 
petually adored. Just as there is no hour of the day or night in 
which in some place on earth the holy sacrifice is not offered, and as 
in heaven the hosts of angels and the company of the redeemed un- 
ceasingly sing the Tersanctus, so it is right that on earth the ascrip- 
tion of praise should incessantly resound : " O Sacrament most holy, 
O Sacrament divine! All praise and all thanksgiving be every mo- 
ment Thine." In addition to the Confraternity of Perpetual Adora- 
tion there are besides in every town, tabernacle or altar societies, 
the object of which is to honor the Adorable Sacrament of the Altar 
by doing the sacristy work, and providing altar linen, vestments, etc., 
for poor churches. Each member of these societies pledges herself 
to spend an hour in church every month in watching before the 
Blessed Sacrament. 

5. The object of the Confraternity of the Sacred Heart of 
Jesus is to venerate and adore the Sacred Heart of Our Lord, and 
participate in the abundant graces He promises to those who 
practise this devotion. 

The members of this confraternity are required to recite an Our 
Eather, Hail Mary, and the Creed daily, with the prayer : " sweet- 
est Heart of Jesus, I implore that I may ever love thee more and 
more ; " they are moreover to approach the sacraments every month, 
if possible on the first Sunday or Friday of the month; to keep the 
feast of the Sacred Heart (on the Friday or Sunday after the octave 
of Corpus Christi) with all solemnity, and to pray for the members 
of the association both living and dead. Many rich indulgences are 
attached to this confraternity; among others, an indulgence of sixty 
days is granted for every good work performed during the day. In 
order to belong to this confraternity, it is not necessary that it should 
be erected in the place where one lives; any one who is once en- 
rolled can gain all the indulgences by complying with the obligations 
imposed on the members. When Our Lord appeared to Blessed Mary 
Alacoque,. He made known to her the great and abundant graces 
vouchsafed to all who honor His Sacred Heart with particular de- 
votion. 

6. The object of the Confraternity of the Holy Eosary is 
to promote the devotion of the Eosary. 

To form the " living rosary " fifteen individuals unite every month 
to apportion among themselves (generally by drawing lots) the fifteen 
decades of the Rosary ; each one recites the decade which falls to his 
share daily throughout the month ; thus between them they recite the 
whole Rosary every day. This confraternity is under the direction 
of the Dominicans. A plenary indulgence may be gained by the 
members on the third Sunday of every month, on Trinity Sunday, 



Religious Associations, 717 

on the principal feasts of Our Lord and of His blessed Mother. The 
recitation of the Rosary is also indulgenced in a special manner. The 
Confraternity of the Holy Rosary was established in the lifetime 
of St. Dominic; the members are required to recite all the fifteen 
decades of the Rosary every week, but not all on one and the self- 
same day. This confraternity is affiliated to the Dominican Order; 
its members share in the good works of the whole Order, and are 
placed under the special protection of Our Lady. A plenary indul- 
gence is granted on the first Sunday of the month, on all feasts of 
Our Lady, on the three great festivals of the Church, and in the hour 
of death. 

7. The object of the Confraternity of the Holy Scapular is 
to implore the protection and intercession of the blessed Mother 
of God in all the perils of this life, in the hour of death, and 
in the flames of purgatory. 

This confraternity was founded in 1250 by St. Simon Stock, then 
general of the Carmelite Order. The Mother of God appeared to 
him and gave him a scapular, with the promise that every one who 
wore it, and lived piously, should escape eternal death, should 
experience her protection in seasons of danger, and should 4)e 
speedily released from purgatory. An aspirant will be admitted 
into the confraternity by a priest who has the necessary faculties from 
the provincial of the Carmelites; his name will be entered in the 
register of the confraternity and the scapular hung round his neck. 
This scapular consists of two small pieces of brown cloth, fastened 
together by braid, so that one piece hangs on the breast, the other 09 
the back; this must be worn night and day. Members of the Third 
Order of Mount Carmel are obliged to recite the little office of Our 
Lady (which may, if necessary, be commuted to a certain number of 
Paters and Aves), to fast on every Friday throughout the year, be- 
sides other specified days ; to make a daily meditation of at least half 
an hour, and observe certain other rules. Plenary indulgences may 
be gained by members of the confraternity on all the festivals of Our 
Lady, and on days when the principal saints of the Order are com- 
memorated, on the usual conditions, with a visit, if possible, to a 
church or chapel of the Order. There are four other scapulars : that 
of the Holy Trinity, of the seven dolors, of the Immaculate Concep- 
tion, and of the Passion. The five are often worn all together. For each 
of these certain prayers are prescribed to be repeated daily. Our 
blessed Lady acts towards her children as Rebecca did to her favorite 
son Jacob ; she arrayed him in the garments of his brother Esau, in 
order that he might obtain the blessing of his father ; so Mary clothes 
us with the scapular, the livery of her divine Son, to render us accept- 
able in the sight of our heavenly Father and obtain for us His 
benediction. 

8. The object of the Confraternity of the Bona Mors is to 
obtain for its members who are yet on earth the privilege of a 
happy death, and for the departed a speedy release from the 
cleansing fires. 



718 The Memis of Grace, 

The members of this confraternity are bound to have a Mass said 
once every year for the intention of their fellow-members, that the 
one who is the next to die may have a happy death, and those who are 
already gone before may experience a mitigation of the pains of pur- 
gatory. They are also exhorted to approach the sacraments fre- 
quently, to entertain a special devotion to the Immaculate Concep- 
tion, to St. Joseph, the patron of a good death, and often to make 
acts of the theological virtues and of contrition. This confraternity 
is very richly indulgenced. For every visit to a sick person, twenty 
years; for every meditation of half-an-hour's length, sixty years; 
for every visit to a church, seven years, etc. All these indulgences 
are applicable to the souls in purgatory. 

9. The object of the Confraternity of the Holy Ghost is to 
beseech the Holy Ghost to multiply the number of priests, and 
enlighten them with His divine light. 

The members of this confraternity are required to repeat daily 
seven Glorias and one Ave for this intention, also to make a no vena 
before Pentecost and receive the sacraments frequently. Among other 
indulgences they may gain one hundred days for every good work 
they perform, a plenary indulgence at Pentecost and on the An- 
nunciation (or in the octaveb of these feasts) and in the hour of 
death. 



TEE AP0STLE8HIP OF PRAYER. 

This is a league of prayers in union with the Sacred Heart 
of Jesus. 

The Apostleship of Prayer is not a confraternity or sodality, but 
a pious organization, whose object is to give an apostolic character 
and power to all our prayers, work, and sufferings. This object it 
attains by the union of its members with the unceasing pleading 
of the Sacred Heart in the sacrifice of the Mass: and this union is 
effected by the morning offering, which constitutes the First Degree 
of the Apostleship of Prayer and the only essential duty of its mem- 
bers. The morning offering is thus worded : " O Jesus, through the 
immaculate heart of Mary, I offer Thee the prayers, work, and suffer- 
ings of this day in union with the intentions of Thy Divine Heart 
in the holy Mass." 

Two things are necessary for membership: 

(1), Registration of one's name by a local director in an affiliated 
centre; (2), A certificate of admission. Centres are affiliated by 
diplomas from the director general (a father of the Society of Jesus, 
residing at Toulouse, France) and transmitted to them by the 
diocesan directors, whom, with the license and in accordance with the 
nomination of the Ordinary, he has appointed for that purpose. The 
second degree consists in the daily recital of one Our Father and ten 
Hail Marys for the monthly intention approved by the Holy Father; 
and the third degree in offering a communion of atonement to the 
Sacred Heart, once a week, or at least once a month on a day or days 



Beligious Associations, 719 

fixed by arrangement with a promoter of the Apostleship of Prayer. 
The organ of the association is called " The Messenger of the Sacred 
Heart" published by the authorized editors in various countries under 
the direction of the director general. There are thirty-seven distinct 
editions of the Messenger. The members of the Apostleship of Prayer 
in the whole world number some twenty to thirty millions. 



CHARITABLE SOCIETIES. 

1. The Society of St. Vincent of Paul is very widespread; 
its object is to seek out the destitute and afford them spiritual 
and temporal relief. 

The work of the active members of this society i& to visit the 
poor in their own dwellings, to assist them with money and the 
necessaries of life, and to make use of every means to ameliorate 
their moral and spiritual condition. They also collect voluntary 
donations and subscriptions from those who are interested in the 
work. Conferences of the members are held every week, as a rule, 
for consultation respecting the most necessitous cases and the most 
necessary works of mercy. For visiting the poor, for every alms dis- 
tributed to them, as well as for everything that is done in their 
service, a large indulgence is granted. This society was started in 
Paris in 1830 by eight students, after imploring the help and guid- 
ance of St. Vincent of Paul, whose remains rest in the Church of 
St. Lazare. It has spread with astonishing rapidity throughout all 
the countries of Europe, and it is impossible to estimate the amount 
of good effected by its means. 

2. Mention may also be made of the Society of St. Boniface, 
the object of which is to preserve German Catholics living in 
Protestant surroundings from losing their faith, by providing 
them with priests of their own nation, and establishing schools 
for the education of their children. 

3. The Society of St. Eaphael, instituted for the purpose of 
affording counsel and protection to German subjects emigrating 
to America. 

It is not intended to encourage and promote emigration; on the 
contrary, many persons are deterred from it, and the intending 
emigrant is warned of the dangers awaiting him in a strange land. 
He is exhorted to go to his religious duties before starting on tTm 
voyage, and on his arrival in the United States he is provided WitJti 
suitable shelter, and often employment is found for him. 

4. The Catholic Society for Friendless Youths. 

This proposes as its object to lead young workingmen to follow 
a religious and upright life, to encourage a spirit of industry and 
brotherly kindness among them. A priest presides over this society; 
the youths are assembled of an evening for innocent entertainment. 



720 The Means of Grace. 

reading, and religious instruction. They are assisted in sickness or 
poverty, and every endeavor is made to render them useful members 
of society. 

5. The Workingman's Guild. 

This association, as well as the one spoken of above, was orig- 
inated in Germany by Adolf Kolping, the so-called " apostle of the 
working-classes," who began life as a shoemaker's apprentice, and 
through diligent study and pious perseverance, fitted himself for 
the office of the priesthood. A great nimaber of friendly societies 
and charitable works for the improvement of the laboring classes, 
and for the promotion of kindly feeling between employers and em- 
ployed, owe their establishment to him. 

Various societies suited to the needs of the people. 

It would be difficult to enumerate the various associations, suited 
to the exigencies of the day in different countries, and corresponding 
to the special needs of the different classes of men and women, which 
the charity of Catholics has instituted. The Catholic Truth Society 
has for its object to supply instructive and useful literature at a low 
price; its work is rapidly extending, and is productive of most satis- 
factory results. " In the present day," as one of our bishops remarks, 
"the need is strongly felt for combination and centralization in all 
great undertakings in the field of politics, commerce and finance. Let 
us then, who are Catholics, unite to form a healthy body, powerful to 
promote and maintain the spirit of Christianity in our families. 
The striving after union, now so strongly marked in every depart- 
ment of social life, surely ought to play a no less prominent part in 
our religious life." 



THE TEAOHINa OF CATECHISM, 



ENCYCLICAL LETTEK OF OUE HOLY FATHER 
PIUS X., 

BY DIVINE PROVIDENCE 
POPE. 

To THE Patrl^chs, Primates^ Archbishops, Bishops, and Other 
Ordinaries in Peace and Communion with the Apostolic See. 

PIUS X., POPE. 

Venerable Brethren, 

Health and the Apostolic Benediction. 

A time of great trouble and difficulty is this in which Our littleness 
has been raised by the inscrutable designs of Divine Providence to 
the office of Supreme Pastor of the whole flock of Christ. Long has 
the enemy been prowling round the fold, attacking it with such 
subtle cunning that now more than ever seems to be verified the pre- 
diction made by the Apostle to the elders of the Church of Ephesus : 
"I know that ravening wolves will enter in among you, not sparing 
the flock." (Acts xx. 29.) 

The reasons and causes of this religious decadence are being 
studied by those who still cherish zeal for the glory of God, and dif- 
fering as they do in their conclusions, they point out, each accord- 
ing to his own views, various ways for protecting and restoring the 
kingdom of God on earth. But to Us, Venerable Brethren, it seems 
that, while other reasons may play their part. We must agree with 
those who hold that the main cause of the present lassitude and tor- 
por, and of the most serious evils that flow from it, is to be found 
in the prevailing ignorance about Divine things. And this fully bears 
out what God Himself afiirmed -ftirough the Prophet Osee: " . . . 
And there is no knowledge of God in the land. Cursing and lying 
and killing and theft and adultery have overflowed, and blood hath 
touched blood. Therefore shall the earth mourn and every one that 
dwelleth in it shall languish." (Osee iv. Iff.) 

That there are among Christians in our time large numbers who 
live in utter ignorance of the truths necessary for salvation is a com- 
mon lament nowadays, and one that is unhappily only too well- 
founded. And when We say among Christians We mean not only 
the masses and those in the lower walks of life, who are sometimes 
not to blame, owing to the inhumanity of masters whose demands 
leave them little time to think of themselves and their own inter- 
ests, but We refer also and even more especially to all those who, 
while endowed with a certain amount of talent and culture and pos- 
sessing abundant knowledge of profane matters, have no care or 
thought for religion. It is hard to find words to describe the dense 
darkness that environs these and, more painful still, the indifference 
with which they regard it. Rarely do they give thought to the Su- 

721 



722 The Teaching of Catechism, 

preme Author and Ruler of all things or to the teaching of the faith 
of Christ. Consequently they are absolutely without knowledge of 
the Incarnation of the Word of God and the redemption of mankind 
wrought by Him, and of Grace which is the chief means for the at- 
tainment of eternal welfare, and of the Holy Sacrifice and the Sac- 
raments by which this grace is acquired and preserved. They fail 
to appreciate the malice and foulness of sin, and they have therefore 
no care to avoid it and free themselves from it. Thus they reach 
their last day in such a state that the minister of God, anxious to 
take advantage of the slightest hope of their salvation, is obliged to 
employ those final moments, which should be consecrated entirely to 
stimidating in them the love of God, in imparting a summary in- 
struction on the things indispensable for salvation — and even then 
it often happens that the invalid has become so far the slave of 
culpable ignorance as to consider superfluous the intervention of the 
priest and to face calmly the terrible passage to eternity without 
reconciling himself with God. Our predecessor Benedict XIV., there- 
fore, had good reason to write as he did: "This we asseverate: that 
the majority of those who are condemned to eternal punishment fall 
into this everlasting misfortime through ignorance of these mys- 
teries of the faith which must necessarily be known and believed by 
all who belong to the elect." (Inst. xxvi. 18.) 

This being so. Venerable Brethren, what wonder is it if we see to- 
day in the world, not merely among barbarous peoples, but in the 
very midst of Christian nations, a constantly increasing corruption 
and depravity? The Apostle writing to the Ephesians admonished 
them: "But fornication and all uncleanness or covetousness, let it 
not be so much as named among you, as becometh saints, or obscenity 
or foolish talking." (Ephes. v. 3, 4.) But as the basis of this holiness 
and of the modesty that curbs the passions he sets supernatural wis- 
dom: "See, therefore, brethren, how you walk circumspectly, not as 
unwise, but as wise, redeeming the time, for the days are evil." (JHd. 
15-16.) 

And rightly so, for the human wiU has retained but little of that 
love of what is right and just which God the Creator infused into 
it, and which drew it, so to speak, towards the real and not merely 
apparent good. Depraved as it has become by the corruption of the 
first sin, and hardly conscious of the existence of God, its Author, 
its affections are almost entirely turned to vanity and lying. The 
erring will, blinded by perverse passions, has need, therefore, of a 
guide to point out the way and lead it back to the paths of justice 
so unhappily abandoned. This guide, not selected at random, but 
designated especially by nature, is no other than the intellect. But if 
the intellect be itself lacking in true light — that is, in the knowledge 
of Divine things — it will be the blind leading the blind, and both will 
fall into the ditch. Holy David, praising God for the light of truth 
which is flashed from Him on our minds, said:^ "The light of thy 
countenance, O Lord, is signed upon us." (Ps. iv. 7.) And he de- 
scribed the effect of this light when he added: "Thou hast given 
gladness in my heart" — the gladness that fills the heart to make it 
run in the way of Divine commandments. 

All this becomes evident on a little reflection, for the doctrine of 
Jesus Christ reveals to us God and His infinite perfection with far 



ITie Teaching of Catechism, 723 

greater clearness than does the natural light of the human intellect. 
What follows? That same doctrine commands us to honor God by 
faith, which is the homage of our mind ; by hope, which is the homage 
of our will; by charity, which is the homage of our heart; and thus 
it binds and subjects the whole of man to his Supreme Maker and 
Euler. So, too, only the doctrine of Christ makes known to us the 
true and most lofty dignity of man by showing him to be the son of 
the celestial Father who is in heaven, made to His image and like- 
ness and destined to live with Him in eternal bliss. But from this 
very dignity and from the knowledge that man has of it Christ de- 
duces the obligation for all men of loving one another like brothers, 
as they are; commands them to live here below as children of light, 
"not in rioting and drunkenness, not in chambering and impurities, 
not in contention and envy" (Rom. xiii. 13) ; obliges them, too, to 
place all their solicitude in God, since He has care of us; commands 
us to stretch forth a helping hand to the poor, to do good to those 
who do evil to us, to prefer the eternal good of the soul to the fleeting 
good of time. And, not to go too far into detail, is it not the doctrine 
of Jesus Christ which inspires in proud man the love of humility, 
which is the source of all true glory ? "Whosoever shall humble him- 
self . . . he is the greater in the kingdom of heaven." (Matt, 
xviii. 4.) From the same doctrine we learn prudence of the spirit, 
by means of which we are enabled to shun the prudence of the flesh ; 
justice, which teaches us to give every one his due; fortitude, which 
makes us ready to suffer all things; and by means of which we do, 
in fact, suffer all things with generosity for the sake of God and of 
our eternal happiness; and, finally, temperance, through which we 
find it possible to love even poverty, and actually to glory in the cross 
and pay no heed to contempt. In fine, the science of Christianity is 
a fount not only of light for the intellect, enabling it to attain to 
truth, but of warmth to the will, whereby we raise ourselves up to 
God and unite ourselves with Him for the practice of virtue. 

Not, indeed, that We mean to say that a knowledge of religion may 
not be joined with a perverse will and a bad life. Would to God 
that facts did not only too abundantly prove the contrary! But 
We do maintain that the will cannot be upright nor conduct good 
while the intellect is the slave of crass ignorance. A man using his 
eyes may certainly turn aside from the right path, but the one who 
has become blind is certain to walk into the mouth of danger. Be- 
sides, there is always some hope for the reform of evil living as long 
as the light of faith is not wholly extinguished; whereas if, as a re- 
sult of ignorance, want of faith is added to corruption, the case hardly 
admits of remedy, and the road to eternal ruin lies open. 

Such, then, being the unhappy consequences of ignorance in mat- 
ters of religion, and such, on the other hand, the necessity and utility 
of religious instruction, seeing that nobody can fulfil the duties of 
a Christian without knowing them, it only remains to inquire as to 
whose duty it is to eliminate this ignorance from the minds of the 
people and to impart to them a knowledge so essential on this point. 
Venerable Brethren, there can be no room for doubt, for this most 
important duty is incumbent on all who are pastors of souls. On 
them, by command of Christ, rests the obligation of knowing and 
feeding the flocks entrusted to them. To feed implies first of all to 



724 The Teaching of Catechism. 

teach. '*I will give you," God promised through Jeremiah, "pastorft 
after my own heart, and they will feed you with knowledge and doc- 
trine." (Jer. iii. 15.) Hence the Apostle St. Paul said: "Christ sent 
me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel" (I Cor. i. 17), thus indi- 
cating that the first office of all those who are placed to rule in some 
measure the Church is to instruct the faithful. 

We do not think it necessary to speak here of the sublime char- 
acter of this instruction or to show how meritorious it is in the sight 
of God. Assuredly the almsgiving with which we alleviate the trials 
of the poor is highly praised by the Lord. But who will deny that 
a far greater measure of praise is due to the zeal and the labor ex- 
pended in teaching and exhortation, not on the fleeting welfare of 
the body but on the eternal welfare of souls? In truth, than this 
nothing is nearer or dearer to the heart of Jesus Christ, the Saviour 
of souls, who, through the lips of Isaias, affirmed of Himself : "I have 
been sent to preach the gospel to the poor." (Luke iv. 18.) 

For Our present purpose it will be better to dwell on a single point 
and to insist on it, viz., that for no priest is there a duty more grave 
or an obligation more binding than this one. Will any one deny that 
knowledge ought to be joined with holiness of life in every priest? 
"For the lips of the priest shall keep knowledge." (Mai. ii. 7.) And 
the Church does, in fact, require it most rigorously in those who are 
to be raised to the sacerdotal ministry. And why this? Because it 
is from them that the Christian people are to learn, and it is for that 
end that they are sent by God. "And they shall seek the law at his 
mouth, for he is the angel of the Lord of Hosts." (Ibid.) Thus the 
bishop in ordaining addresses the candidates for orders in these 
words: "Let your spiritual doctrine be as medicine for the people 
of God; let them be prudent co-operators of our order; in order 
that meditating day and night on His law they may believe what 
they shall read, and teach what they shall believe." ("Pont. Kom.") 

If this is true of all priests, what is to be thoug^ht with regard to 
those who possess the title and the authority of parish priests, and 
who, by virtue of their rank and in a sense by contract, have the 
office of ruling souls? These, in a certain measure, are to be num- 
bered among the pastors and doctors designated by Christ in order 
that the faithful may be no longer as children tossed to and fro and 
carried about by every wind of doctrine by the wickedness of men, 
but that "doing the truth in charity they may in all things grow up 
in him who is the head, even Christ." (Eph. iv. 14, 15.) 

Hence the sacred Council of Trent, treating of the pastors of souls, 
lays down as their first and chief duty that of instructing the faithful. 
It prescribes that they must speak to the people on the truths of re- 
ligion on Simdays and the more solemn feasts, and do the same either 
daily or at least three times a week during the holy seasons of Advent 
and Lent. Nor is it content with this, for it adds that parish priests 
are bound, either by themselves or through others, to instruct the 
young, at least on Sundays and feast days, in the principles of faith 
and in obedience to God and their parents. (Sess. 5 ch. 2 de ref.; 
Sess. 22 ch. 8 ; Sess. 24 ch. 4 and 7 de ref.) And when the Sacraments 
are to be administered it enjoins upon them the duty of explaining 
their efficacy in the vulgar tongue to those who are about to receive 
them. 



The Teaching of Catechisrru 726 

These prescriptions of the sacred Council of Trent have been epit- 
omized and still more clearly defined by Our predecessor Benedict 
XIV. in his Constitution "Etsi Minime" in the following words: 
"Two chief obligations have been imposed by the Council of Trent 
on those who have the care of souls : first, that they address the people 
on divine things on feast days, and second, that they instruct the 
young and the ignorant in the rudiments of the law of God and of 
faith." Kightly does that most wise Pontiff make a distinction be- 
tween those two duties of the sermon, commonly known as the ex- 
planation of the Gospel and of the catechism. For it may be that 
there are some who, to save themselves trouble, are willing to believe 
that the explanation of the Gospel may serve also for catechetical 
instruction. This is an error which should be apparent to all, for 
the sermon on the Gospel is addressed to those who may be supposed 
to be abeady instructed in the rudiments of the faith. It is, so to 
say, the bread that is broken for adults. Catechetical instruction, on 
the other hand, is that milk which the Apostle St. Peter wished to 
be desired with simplicity by the faithful as newly born children. 
The task of the catechist is to take up one or other of the truths of 
faith or Christian precept, and to explain it in all its parts; and 
since the scope of his instruction is always directed to amendment of 
life, he must necessarily institute a comparison between vvhat is re- 
quired of us by Our Lord and our actual conduct; and he should, 
therefore, by appropriate examples skilfully selected from the Holy 
Scriptures, church history, and the lives of the saints, use persuasion 
with his hearers and point out to them how they are to shape their 
conduct, concluding with an efficacious exhortation in order that they 
may be moved to shun and detest vice and to practice virtue. 

We are aware that the office of catechist is not much sought after, 
because, as a rule, it is deemed of little account and does not lend 
itself easily to the winning of applause. But this, in Our view, is an 
estimate born of vanity and not of truth. We are quite willing to 
admit the merits of those sacred orators who dedicate themselves 
with genuine zeal to the glory of God by the defense and maintenance 
of the faith or by extolling the heroes of Christianity. But their 
labor presupposes labor of another kind, that of the catechist. Where 
the latter is wanting the foundations are wanting, and they labor in 
vain who build the house. Too often it happens that ornate sermons 
which win the applause of crowded congregations serve only to tickle 
the ears, and fail utterly to touch the heart. Catechetical instruc- 
tion, on the other hand, plain and simple though it be, is that word 
of which God Himself speaks in Isaias : "And as the rain and the snow 
come down from heaven and return no more thither, but soak the 
earth and water it, and make it to spring, and give seed to the sower 
and bread to the eater ;so shall my word be which shall go forth from 
my mouth; it shall not return to me void, but shall do whatsoever I 
please, and shall prosper in the things for which I sent it." The 
same. We think, is to be said of those priests who compose laborious 
books to illustrate the truths of religion. They are worthy of great 
commendation for their activity. But how many read these volumes 
and derive fruit in proportion to the toil and the wishes of those who 
wrote them? Whereas the teaching of the catechism, when properly 
done, never fails to be of profit to those who listen to it. 



726 The Teaxihing of Catechism. 

For (we must repeat this truth in order to stimulate the zeal of 
the ministers of the sanctuary) there are to-day vast numbers — and 
they are constantly increasing — ^who are utterly ignorant of the truths 
of religion, or who have at most so little knowledge of God and of 
the Christian faith that they can live as idolaters in the very midst 
of the light of Christianity. How many there are, not only among 
the young, but among adults and even those tottering with age, who 
know nothing of the principal mysteries of faith, who on hearing the 
name of Christ can only ask: "Who is he . . . that I may be- 
lieve in him." (John ix. 36.) And in consequence of this ignorance 
they make no crime of exciting and cherishing hatred against their 
neighbor, of entering into most unjust contracts, giving themselves 
up to dishonest speculations, possessing themselves of the property 
of others by enormous usury, and committing similar iniquities. They 
are^ actually ignorant that the law of Christ not only forbids immoral 
actions, but condemns deliberate immoral thoughts and immoral de- 
sires, so that even when they are restrained by some motive or other 
from abandoning themselves to sensual pleasures, they feed without 
any kind of scruple on evil thoughts, multiplying sins beyond the 
hairs of their heads. Nor, let it be repeated, are such to be found 
only among the poorer classes of the people or in country places, but 
in the highest walks of life, and among those who, inflated with 
knowledge, rely upon a vain erudition and think themselves at liberty 
to turn religion into ridicule and to "blaspheme that which they know 
not.'' (Jud. 10.) ^ 

Now, if it is vain to expect a harvest where no seed has been sown, 
how can we hope to have better-living generations if they be not in- 
structed in time in the doctrine of Jesus Chyist ? It follows, too, 
that if faith languishes in our days, if it has almost vanished through- 
out a large proportion of the people, the reason is that the duty of 
catechetical teaching is either fulfilled very superficially or altogether 
neglected. Nor will it do to say, in excuse, that faith is a free gift 
bestowed on each one at baptism. Yes, all who are baptized in Christ 
have had infused into them the habit of faith; but this most divine 
germ does not develop, or "put forth great branches" (Mark iv. 32) 
when left to itself, and as if by its own virtue. Man at his birth has 
within him the faculty of understanding, but he has need, also, of the 
mother's word to awaken it, as it were, and to bring it into action. 
So, too, the Christian, born again of water and the Holy Ghost, has 
faith within him, but he requires the word of the Church to fecundate 
it and develop it and make it fruitful. Hence the Apostle wrote: 
"Faith comes from hearing, and hearing by the word of God" (Ro- 
mans x. 17), and to show the necessity of teaching he adds: "How 
shall they hear without a preacher?" (Ibid.) 

Now, if all that has been said serves to show the supreme impor- 
tance of religious teaching, supreme, also, must be Our solicitude in 
maintaining always in vigor, and in establishing where it may hap- 
pen to have become neglected, the teaching of the catechism which 
Benedict XIV. described as "the most useful of institutions for the 
glory of God and the salvation of souls." (Cons. "Etsi Minime," 13.) 
Desirous, therefore. Venerable Brethren, of fulfilling this most im- 
portant duty, imposed upon Us by the Supreme Apostolate, and of 
introducing uniformity everywhere in this most weighty matter. We 



The Teaching of Catechism. 727 

do, by Our Supreme authority, enact and strictly ordain that in all 
dioceses the following precepts be observed: 

First — All parish priests and, in general, all those who have the 
care of souls, on every Sunday and feast day throughout the year, 
without exception, shall with the text of the catechism instruct for 
the space of an hour the young of both sexes in what every one must 
believe and do to be saved. 

Second — They shall, at stated times during the year, prepare boys 
and girls by continued instruction, lasting several days, to receive 
the sacraments of Penance and Confirmation. 

Third — They shall likewise, and with special care, on all ferial days 
of Lent, and, if necessary, on other days after the feast of Easter, 
by suitable instruction and reflections, prepare boys and girls to make 
their first Communion in a holy manner. 

Fourth — In each and every parish the Confraternity of Christian 
Doctrine is to be canonically erected. Through this the parish priests, 
especially in places where there is a scarcity of priests, will find val- 
uable helpers for the catechetical instruction in pious lay persons who 
will lend their aid to this holy and salutary work, both through zeal 
for the glory of God and as a means of gaining the numerous indul- 
gences granted by the Sovereign Pontiffs. 

Fifth — In large towns, and especially in those which contain uni- 
versities, colleges and grammar schools, let religious classes be 
founded, to instruct in the truths of faith and in the practice of Chris- 
tian life the young people who frequent those public schools from 
which all religious teaching is banned. 

Sixth — Considering, too, that especially in these days adults not 
less than the young stand in need of religious instruction, all parish 
priests and others having the care of souls shall, in addition to the 
usual homily on the Gospel delivered at the parochial Mass on all 
days of obligation, explain the Catechism for the faithful in any 
easy style suited to the intelligence of their hearers, at such time of 
the day as they may deem most convenient for the people, but not 
during the hour in which the children are taught. In this instruction 
they are to make use of the Catechism of the Council of Trent, and 
they are to divide the matter in such a way as within the space of 
four or five years to treat of the Apostles' Creed, the Sacraments, 
the Decalogue, the Lord's Prayer and the Precepts of the Church. 

This, Venerable Brethren, We do prescribe and command by virtue 
of Apostolic Authority. It now rests with you to put it into prompt 
and complete execution in your diocese, and by all the force at your 
command, and to see to it that these prescriptions of Ours be not 
neglected or, what comes to the same thing, carried out superficially. 
And, that this may be avoided, you must not cease to recommend 
and to require that your parish priests do not impart this instruction 
carelessly, but that they diligently prepare themselves for it ; let them 
not speak words of human wisdom, but "with simplicity of heart and 
in the sincerity of God" (IT. Cor. i. 12), imitating the example of 
Jesus Christ, who though "he revealed mysteries hidden from the be- 
ginning of the world" (Matt. xiii. 35) yet always spoke "to the multi- 
tudes in parables, and without parables did not speak to them" (Ibid. 
34). The same thing was done, also, by the Apostles taught by Our 
Lord, of whom the Pontiff Gregory the Great said: "They took su- 



728 77ie Teaching of Catechism, 

preme care to preach to the ignorant things easy and intelligible, not 
sublime and arduous." (Moral. II. xviii. ch. 26.) In matters of re- 
ligion the majority of men in our times must be considered as ig- 
norant. 

We would not, however, have it supposed that this studied sim- 
t)licity of preaching does not require labor and meditation; on the 
contrary, it requires it more than any other kind. It is much easier 
to find a preacher capable of delivering an eloquent and elaborate dis- 
course than a catechist able to impart instruction in a manner en- 
tirely worthy of praise. It must, therefore, be carefully borne in 
mind that whatever facility of ideas and language a man may have 
inherited from nature, he will never be able to teach the Catechism 
to the young and the adult without preparing himself thoughtfully 
for the task. It is a mistake for a man to suppose that, owing to the 
rudeness and ignorance of the people, he may perform this office in 
a careless manner. On the contrary, the more uncultured the hear- 
ers the greater is the necessity for study and diligence to bring home 
to their minds those most sublime truths, so far beyond the natural 
understanding of the multitude, which must yet be known by all the 
learned and the unlettered alike, in order that they may attain eternal 
salvation. 

And now. Venerable Brethren, be it permitted Us to close this 
letter by addressing to you these words of Moses: "If any man be 
on the Lord's side, let him join with me." (Ex. xxxii. 26.) We pray 
and conjure you to reflect cu the ruin of souls which is wrought by 
this one cause, ignorance of Divine things. Doubtless you have estab- 
lished many useful and praiseworthy undertakings in your respective 
dioceses for the benefit of the flock entrusted to you, but before all 
else, and with all the diligence, all the zeal, all the assiduity that is 
possible for you, see to it that the knowledge of Christian doctrine 
thoroughly penetrate and pervade the minds of all. "Let every one" — 
these are the words of the Apostle St. Peter — "as he has received 
grace, minister the same one to another, as good stewards of the mani- 
fold grace of God." (I. Peter iv. 10.) 

Through the intercession of the most blessed Immaculate Virgin, 
may your diligence and your energy be rendered fruitful by the Apos- 
tolic Blessing which, in token of Our affection and as an earnest of 
Divine favors. We impart to you and to the clergy and the people en- 
trusted to each one of you. 

Given at Kome, at St. Peter's, on the 15th day of April, 
MDCCCOV., in the second year of Our Pontificate. 

PIUS X., POPE. 



ALPHABETIC INDEX. 



Italic numbers give the principal place. 



Abel, tvpe of Christ, 170. 

Abraham, faith, 89; promise, 164, 172. 

Absolution, power, 470, 605; words, 
605. 

Abstinence, 361; on Fridays, 362; dis- 
pense, 364; means of perfection, 513. 

Abuses in the Church, 244. 

Abusive speech, 404. 

Accommodated speech in revelation, 
117, 130. 

Activity in Bl. Trinity, 129; in Christ, 
198. 

Acts of theol. virtues, 310, 443, 601; 
of charity, 292; heroic act, 267. 

Adam and Eve, created, 152 f., 153 ; 
body, 153; soul, 154; happiness, per- 
fections, 156; of soul and body, 157; 
supernatural, 1571; original sin, 
fall, 158; its consequence, 159; its 
transmission, 161. 

Admonition, fraternal, 622. 

Adoration of Christ's humanity, 199; 
of God, reasons, 309, and nature, 
310; interior, 310; exterior a. and its 
reasons, 311; no value without the 
interior, 311; a. due to God alone, 
313, 321; not to any saint, 321; in- 
cluding Mary, 323; a. of Bl. Eucha- 
rist, 592 ff. ; perpetual a., 593. 

Adulteration of food, 385. 

Adultery, 660. 

Advent of Holy Ghost, 192; of Christ 
the Judge, 270; holy season, 359, 
360, 368; (marriages) in Greek 
Church, 181. 

Adversities, see Sufferings. 

Affinity by marriage, 654; spiritual, 
583, 588, 654. 

Afflictions, see Sufferings. 

African slave trade, 233. 

Age for fast, 364; confirmation, 586; 
communion, 595 f . ; extreme unction, 
642 ; holy orders, 647 ; marriage, 654. 



Agnus Dei in Mass, 540. 

Agony of Christ, 186 f. 

Agriculture and the Church, 250. 

Alb, 562. 

Albigenses, 220, 694. 

Alexander the Great and the high 
priest, 644. 

Alfonse, King, on thanksgiving, 94, 
683. 

AUegri, musician, 568. 

All Saints' day, 361. 

All Souls' day, 266, 361. 

Alms, 435; means of grace, 210; 
wings of prayer, 675; duty, 300; 
rule, 426; benefits, 4271; for the 
poor souls, 252, 260s 

Alphabet, Greek and Latin, at church 
dedication, 561. 

Altar, 55,91; a. bread and wine, 537; 
a. linen, 5C0; over souls of martyrs, 
332; stripping, 186; portable a.^ 
562; privileged, 639; a. societies, 
716. 

Alt-Otting, 329, 705. 

Ambition, 402; see Pride. 

Ambrose, St., 88; and Theodosius 
229; plain chant, 250. 

Amen, 689. 

Amendment, purpose of, 621. 

Amice, 562. 

Amusements on Sundays and Satur- 
days, 350; in Lent, 183; lawful and 
sinful, 356; dangerous, 477; excess, 
383, 684. 

Andrew, St., apostle, 230. 

Angelical salutation, 690. 

Angels, creation, 132; nature, 1^6-, 
number, 146; choirs, 147; happiness 
and glory, 150; representations, 
150; guardian a., 150, 464; fallen 
a., 147. 

Angelus, 195, 323, 683; explained, 693. 

Anger, 469, 491; nature and effeetS; 
493; how overcome, 494. 

Anglican church, 234, 244 



729 



730 



Alphabetic Index. 



Animals, creation, 134; soul, 152; do- 
minion of man, 157; lost by sin, 
160; made for man, 390; duties to- 
wards a., 391. 

Anniversaries of church dedication, 
662; of saints, 320. 

Annunciation B. V. M., 179, 195. 

Anointings at church consecration, 
561; baptism, 584 f.; confirmation, 
585 f.; extreme unction, 640 f.; or- 
dination, 643; blessing of holy oils, 
186, 670. 

Anselm, St., 88. 

Antoninus, St., on alms, 432; confes- 
sion, 608. 

Anthony, St., the hermit, 519. 

Anthony, St., of Padua, 82, 321. 

Antichrist, 273; his miracles, 316. 

Antiochus, King, 173. 

Antipopes, 243. 

Apes, 153. 

Apostasy and apostates, 104; causes, 
105. 

Apostles, mission, 81, 83, 183, 222; di- 
vision, 230; successors, 226. 

Apostleship of prayer, 718. 

Apostolicity of Church, 244. 

Apparitions of Grod, 113; Holy Ghost, 
226; angels, 146, 151; holy souls, 
264; devils, 148, 157; the dead, 155, 
264. 

Appeal from Pope to council, 226. 

Appearances, see Species. 

" Appropriation " in Bl. Trinity, 130. 

Archbishops, 227, 242. 

Archheretics, 98. 

Architecture and the Church, 249. 

Argenteuil, holy coat of, 331. 

Arius, 98, 201, 232, 235. 

Artaxerxes, 173. 

Arts and the Church, 250. 

Articles of the Creed, 109. 

Ascension of Christ, 191, 358. 

Aspiration to perfection, 509; to holi- 
ness, 523. 

Ash Wednesday, 160, 360. 

Associations, 710; see Societies. 

Assumption B. V. M., 84, 253, 325. 

Astrology, 315. 

Athanasius, St., 88. 

Atheism, 111. 

Atonement by Christ, 530; in Mass, 
547 ; day of a., 528. 

Attila and Leo I., 644. 

Attention at Mass, 553, 555. 

Attributes of God, 114; body of Christ, 
190; Adam, 156; Church, 235, 242. 

Attrition, 620. 

Augustine, St., 88; conversion, 93. 

Augustine, St., of Canterbury, 232. 



Authenticity of relics, 330. 
Authority, spiritual and secular, 373; 

of pope, 374; bishops, 226, 709. 
Avarice, 469; nature, 495; effects, 496; 

how overcome, 497; an idolatry, 314. 
Ave Maria, see Hail Mary. 



Babylon, Jewish captivity, 173; B. for 
Eome, 224. 

Bach, musician, 568. 

Balm, 585 f. 

Baltassar, King, his sacrilege, 3441 

Bankruptcy, fraudulent, 397. 

Banners, 698. 

Bans of marriage, 657. 

Baptism, 577 ff., 212, 221, 228, 251, 443, 
470; heathen and Jewish, 577; cere- 
mony, 577, 581, 583; institution and 
effects, 577 f.; necessity, 579; condi- 
tional b., minister, place (private 
b.), 580; by Protestants, 577, 580; 
by Jews, 580; b. by blood and de- 
sire, 580; solemn b., 581; baptismal 
vow, b. name, 582; immersion, 582; 
sponsors, 583; meaning of cere- 
monies, 584; b. water blessed, 581; 
b. font, 188, 192; b. dress, 584. 

Baptistery, 580. 

Bartholomew, apostle, 230. 

Basil, St., 88; monasticism, 520. 

Beatification, 241, 318. 

Beatific vision, 258, 437. 

Beatissime Pater, 225. 

Beatitudes, the eight, 521 ff.; the poor 
in spirit, 521; the mourners, 522; 
the hungry for justice, 523; the 
clean of heart, 523; those perse- 
cuted for justice, 524; b. of the 
worldling, 525. 

Beauty of Christ's glorious body, 190, 
591; of soul in grace, 211, 441; how 
lost, 451, 462; of risen body, 269. 

Beethoven, musician, 568. 

Belief, see Faith. 

Bellarmine, Card., visits to Bl. Sacr., 
592. 

Bells ringing for the dead, 252, 693; 
Angelus b., 323, 693; sanctuary b., 
537; Fiiday b., 187. 

Benedict, St., father of monks, 520. 

Benediction with Bl. Sacr., 707; papal, 
638, 642. 

Bcnedictus, 183, 341. 

Bernard, St., 88. 

Bethania, 177. 

Bethlehem, 165, 177, 179; murdt?f of 
children, 267. 



Alphabetic Index. 



731 



Betrothal, 655, 656; dissolution, 657. 

Bible, 84 ff.; not the only rule of faith, 
83; b. and tradition, 84; inspiration, 
84; contents, 85; versions among 
early Christians, 86; among heretics, 
87; infallibility, 85; canon and gen- 
uineness, 86; reading and inter- 
pretation, 87 f. 

Bishops, 226 f.; name, 223, 241; suc- 
cessors of apostles, 183, 226, 241 ; of- 
fice and authority, 226, 709; institu- 
tion, 241 ; consecration, 648 ; b. in 
council, 237; dispersed, 238; coadju- 
tor b., 227; Greek and Anglican, 227. 

Black in liturgy, 564. 

Blase, St., patron, 321. 

Blasphemy, 343; grave sin, 344; pun- 
ished, 345; confraternity of Holy 
Face, 346. 

Blessed Sacrament, see Eucharist. 

Blessings, 668; see Sacramentals. 

Blindness, spiritual, 293; by sin, 459, 
462; by vice, 468; b. of heathens, 
82, 111. 

Blood, precious, of Christ, 199; of Old 
Covenant, 527; of St. Januarius, 91. 

Body, human, creation, 152; instru- 
ment of soul, 152; decay after 
death, 254; burial, 700; the risen 
b., 269; dignity, 380; our duties, 
381 f.; b. of the saints incorrupt, 
91, 107, 331; Christ's glorified b.. 
190; mystic b., 251, 579. 

Bo7ia Mors, confraternity, 717. 

Bonaventura, St., 88. 

Boniface, St., apostle of Germany, 232 : 
society of, 719. 

Boniface VIII. and the jubilee, 634. 

Books, spiritual, 570; means of grace, 
207; bad b., 100 f., 460, 4781; con- 
demned b., 240; law of Church, 101; 
see Reading. 

" Brethren of Christ," 322. 

Breviarv, 529, 648. 

Bribery, 379. 

Brothers of Charity, 421. 

Burial, Christian,' TOO; not pompous, 
267; ceremonious, 700; churchyard, 
cremation, 701; work of mercy, 422; 
denied, 368, 702; pagan b., 701. 

C. 

Csesarea Philippi, 177. 

Calandoni, O. P., inventor, 250. 

Calendar, Christian, 175, 182. 

Calumny, 404. 

Calvary, 177, 186, 529. 

Calvin, heresiarch, 234. 

Candlemas, 182, 359; procession, 698. 



Candles, 182, 265, 698; paschal c, 188; 
triple c, 188; c. before images, 330; 
at baptism, 584; at the altar, 559; 
on walls of church, 561; at funerals, 
700. 

Candlestick, sevenfold, in temple, 216, 
590. 

Canon, dignity, 227. 

Canonization, 317, 354; miracles, 96, 
220; heroic virtue, 447; infallibility, 
240; cause of joy in heaven, 257. 

Capharnaum, 177. 

Capital, see Employers, 415, 461; c. 
sins, 468 f., 483 flf.; virtues, 444, 
479 ff. 

Cardinals, 225, 242. 

Carmel, Mt, 177; scapular, 717. 

Carnival pleasures, 183. 

Catacombs on Mass, 535. 559; images, 
327; early Christians, 231. 

Catechism, importance, 9, 80, 92. 

Catechumens, 188, 231 f., 581; Mass of 
the c, 539. 

CatJiedra, ex, definitions, 239. 

Catherine, St., of Bologna and the 
poor souls, 252. 

Catherine of Russia and the Jesuits, 
249. 

Catherine, St., of Sienna, in ecstasy, 
219, 

Catholics, defined, 228; Roman Catho- 
lic, 225; number, 234; duties and 
rights, 229; given more grace than 
others, 208. 

Catholicity of Church, 244. 

Catholic Truth Society, 720. 

Cavalieri, S. J., scientist, 250. 

Cecilia, St., society of, 569. 

Celibacy, 521, 648, 654. 

Cemeteries, 701. 

Ceremonies and sensible signs, means 
of interior devotion, 311, 573, 672; 
symbols of invisible mysteries, 
572 f.; reverence for c, 340; c. of 
Mass, 539 f . ; communion, 538 ; sac- 
raments, 573; baptism, 581, 583; 
confirmation, 585; extreme unction, 
640; holy orders, 643; marriage, 
649; consecration of Church, 561. 

Certainty of grace, 216. 

Chalcedon, council, on Pope, 224. 

Chalice, 563; not for the laity, 594. 

Chanaan, 175. 

Change of one's religion, 245. 

Chant, see Music. 

Character, sacramental, 576, 646. 

Charlemagne, Christian era, 175; 
schools, 249; on perjury, 335; do- 
nation to Pope, 226. 

Charles Borromeo at billiards, 356, 



732 



Alphabetic Index, 



Charles Martel, 232, 

Charity, virtue, 442; greatest of all, 
447; institutions, 248; Brothers and 
Sisters of C, 421; see Love. 

Chastity, 444, 500 S.; nature, 500; ex- 
cellence and advantages, 501; means 
to preserve it, 5021; vow, 336; per- 
fect, 517; sins against c, 392, 504. 

Cheating, 396. 

Childhood, sodality of Holy, 233, 314, 
715. 

Children, dying without baptism, 160, 
263, 579; c. of non-catholics mem- 
bers of Church, 228; c. of Adam, 
161; of God by grace, 215, 577; c. 
duties to parents, 368 ff . ; first com- 
munion, 595; extreme unction, 642; 
baptism, instruction, prayer, 662; 
Christian education, 663. 

China and Japan, conversion, 233. 

Chrism in baptism, 584; in confirma- 
tion, 585. 

Christ, see Jesus. 

Christianity, its divinity, 95; elevated 
doctrine, 202; spreading, 203, 231; 
results, 204. 

Christians, name, 228; known by love, 
297. 

Christina, Queen, conversion, 246. 

Christmas, 180; crib, 181, 710; tree, 
195, 358, 558. 

Chrysostom, St., 88; presence of God, 
117. 

Church, the Catholic, 221 &.; a king- 
dom, 168, 222; a community, 221, 
231; institution, 221, 230; members^ 
223, 244, 247; organization and gov- 
ernment, 223 ff., 702; hierarchv, 
241 ff.; indestructibility, 178, 235; 
infallibility, 90, 236 ff.; her three- 
fold office, 222; "Mother of Chris- 
tians," 221; notes or marks, 242 ff.; 
necessity for salvation, 245 f . ; in- 
dependence, 247; soul and body, 
247; persecuted, 231; her martyrs, 
242; propagation in Roman Empire, 
231; Europe, 232; New World, 233; 
number of members at present, 234; 
benefits to mankind, 248; C. and 
the Holy Ghost, 90, 214, 219 f.; and 
Bible, 87; and St. Joseph, 194; and 
State, 247; concordats, 248; edu- 
cation, 249; architecture, 249; fine 
arts, agriculture, and science, 250; 
militant, suffering, triumphant, 251; 
mystic body of Christ, 251; her au- 
thority, 373; obedience to her laws, 
374 f., 357; C. and capital punish- 
ment, 389; socialism, 415 f.; forgive- 
ttess of sins, 470; C. of Rome, 231. 



Churches, site and symbolism, 560; 
patron saints, 320; consecration, 
561; houses of prayer, 685. 

Churching of mothers, 669. 

Churchyard, 701. 

Ciborium, 563, 539. 

Cincture, 562. 

Circumcision of Christ, 182, 282, 358. 

Circumstances of sin, 456, 617; of 
prayer, 675. 

Citizens' duties, 374 ff.; at elections 
377. 

Civil authority, 373, 375; government, 
374; marriage and divorce, 651. 

Civilization, Christian, 204, 249 ff. 

Clandestinity, 651, 658. 

Clement of Rome, on Corinthian 
schism, 224. 

Clergy, see Hierarchy, Bishops, Priests, 
Deacons, Holy Orders. 

Coadjutor bishops, 227. 

Codrus, King, his sacrifice, 196. 

Cologne, relics of Magi, 181. 

Colors, liturgical, 563; papal, 226. 

Columbus and San Salvador, 430. 

Commandments (laws) of God, 75, 
280 ff., 306 f£.; Jewish and Christian 
Decalogue binding upon Christians, 
307 ; their order, 307 f . ; reward and 
punishment, 308; observance easy, 
308. First C, 309; true worship of 
God, 310; idolatry, 313; supersti- 
tion, 315; other sins, 317; venera- 
tion of saints, 318; of B. V. M., 323; 
images, 329; relics, 331; oaths, 333; 
voA\s, 336. Second C, reverence to 
God, holy things, and persons, 339; 
disrespect, 343; swearing, 342; 
blasphemy, 343; sacrilege, 344; 
simony, 345. Third C, Sundays 
and holydays, 347; sins, 350; labor, 
353; relaxations, 356. Fourth C, 
duty to parents, 368; sins, 371; re- 
ward, 372; duty to authority, 371, 
373; duties of those in authority, 
378; of parents, 661. Fifth C, 380; 
duty to our life, 380; to that of 
neighbor, 384; to animals, 391. 
Sixth C, sins of impurity, 392. 
Seventh C, 393; right of posses- 
sion, 394; sins, 395; restitution, 
397; motives, 399. Eighth C, 400; 
forbids injury to neighbor's honor, 
400; motives, 406; forbids untruth- 
fulness, 407; motives and preven- 
tive means, 412. Ninth C, 413. 
Tenth C, 413; socialism, 414. 

Commandments (laws) of Christ, 
284 f.; c. of mercy, 419, 

Commandments of Church, 357 ff . ; or- 



Alphabetic Index, 



733 



der, obligation, violation, dispensa- 
tion, 357. First C, 358; ecclesias- 
tical year, 359. Second C, 361. 
Third, fourth, 366. Fifth, sixth, 
368. 

Commiinicatio idiomatum, 200. 

Communication, religious, with Prot- 
estants, 104. 

Communion of saints, 250; in good 
works, 251. 

Communion (Holy Eucharist), J93ff.; 
under one kind, 594; necessity, 594; 
frequency, 594, 515; neglect, 595; 
Easter, 367, 595; Sundays, 595; 
children, 596; weekly and daily, 
596; communicants, 597; effects, 
597 ff.; preparation of soul, 599; 
(sacrilege, 600) ; of body, fasting, 
602; conduct, 603; thanksgiving, 
603; ceremonies, 538; spiritual c, 
604, 555; c. for the poor souls, 267. 

Communism (socialism), 414 ff.; c. 
and religious orders, 417. 

Company, irreligious, 100. 

Complacency, sinful, 452. 

Complaints in adversity, 489. 

Complicity in sin, 454 f. 

Composteila, shrine in Spain, 230. 

Conception, Immaculate B. V. M., 82, 
84, 239, 324. 

Concomitance in Eucharist, 591. 

Concordats, 248. 

Concupiscence, 159, 212: triple c. and 
evangelical counsels, 518; lessened 
by holy communion, 598; and con- 
fession, 624. 

Conditions of salvation, 74, 93; oaths, 
334; vows, 330, 338; merit, 435 f.; 
sin, 458; forgiveness of sin, 471, 
605; sacraments, 575; confirmation, 
587; communion, 597, 599; confes- 
sion, 015 ff.; extreme unction, 642; 
marriage, 056; indulgences, 635; 
prayer, 678 f. ; sponsors, 583, 588. 

Confession (Sacrament of Penance), 
605 S., 212, 366, 443, 470; institu- 
tion, 605, 626; nature, 605; neces- 
sity, delay, 606; false shame, 607; 
sacrilegious, 608; minister or con- 
fessor, 609; his power and its lim- 
its, 609; threefold office, seal of 
secrecy, 610; free choice, 611; regu- 
lar c, 611; effects, 611 fif.; frequent 
c, 614, 515; Easter c, 367; condi- 
tions, 615 ff. ; examen of conscience, 
615 f.; contrition, 617; motives of 
perfect contrition, 619; attrition, 
620; necessity, 621; purpose of 
amendment, 621: acru'^iition. 622: 
satisfaction, 623 f . ; voluntary pen- 



ances, 625; general c, 625, 657; his- 
tory of c, 627; benefits of c, 628; 
relapse in sin, 629; means to perse- 
vere, 631; c. of temptations, 475. 

Confessionals, 605. 

Confessor in sacrament, 609 ff.; c. of 
faith, 103. 

Confidence in God, 138, 278; in prayer, 
680; see Hope. 

Confirmation, 574, 58Jf; ceremonies, 
388, 585; effects, 586; age, 586; 
neglect, time, preparation, 587; 
name, sponsors, 588. 

Confraternity, Tiiff.; Holy Child- 
hood, 233; Perpetual Adoration, 
593; Holy Face, 346; Bl. Saera- 
ment, 715; S. Heart of Jesus, 716; 
Holy Rosary, 716; Scapular, 717; 
Bona Mors, 717; Holy Ghost, 718. 

Congratulations, 296. 

Congresses, Catholic, 709; U. S. Con- 
gress, 377. 

Conscience, 125, 282 f,; different kinds, 
283; examen, 600, 615; daily, 617. 

Consanguinity, 654. 

Consecration at last supper, 532, 589; 
at Mass, 538, 554; c. of bishops, 
648; other persons, 669; of churches, 
561, 669. 

Consensus of mankind in existence of 
God, 110; unity of race, 153; im- 
mortality of soul, 156; hell, 261; 
purgatory, 266; seventh day's rest, 
347; prayer, 677. 

Consolation, spiritual, by confession, 
614. 

Constancy, see Perseverance. 

Constantino, Emp., conversion, 93; 
cross, 106, 236; freedom to Church, 
231. 

Constantinople, 233; (schism), II. 
Council on Holy Ghost, 205; hell, 
263. 

Constantius, Emp., trial of faith, 104. 

Contrition, 6J7 fi.; tears, 618; mo- 
tives, 619; perfect c. and its efficacy, 
619; time, 620; attrition, 620: 
necessity, 621, 471; purpose of 
amendment, 621; c. at prayer, 680. 

Controversy, 103. 

Conversion to faith, means, 92 f. ; ob- 
stacles, 93; remarkable cases, 244, 
246; of Jews, 274; c. of free- 
masons, 251; c. of sinners, 123; 
by alms, 424; good works, 437; on 
deathbed, 124. 

Co-operation with grace, 206, 208; c. 
with sin, 454 f. 

Copernicus, astronomer, 250. 

Coriolanus and his mother, 325. 



734 



Alphabetic Index. 



Coronation of Pope, 76. 

Corporal mercy, 241. 

Corpus Ghristi, 102, 358, 531, 593; 
procession, 699. 

Correction, fraternal, 422. 

Councils, 237; general, national, pro- 
vincial, 238; utility, 240. 

Counsels, evangelical, 516 ff.; nature, 
517; origin, 518; means of perfec- 
tion, 516, 519; perfect by vows, 336; 
gift of c, 218. 

Covetousness, see Avarice. 

Cranmer not a martyr, 104. 

Creation of angels, 132, 146; world, 
130, 132; man, 134, 152; brutes, 
134; plan, 135; purpose, 136. 

Creatures, love of, 289; when sinful, 
292 f. 

Creed, apostolic, Athanasian, Nicene, 
Tridentine, 108. 

Cremation, 701. 

Cross, sign of, 105, 531; advantages, 
106; practise, 107, 531; letter Thau, 
107; holy c, 187; finding, 107; sac- 
rifice on the c, 529 ff . ; veneration 
of the c, 329; on Good Friday, 188. 

Cruelty to animals, 391. 

Crusades, indulgence, 634. 

Curates, 228. 

Cursing, 342. 

Cyril, St., apostle of the slaves, 232. 

Cyrus of Persia, 166, 173. 

I>. 

Daily prayers, 682. 

Dalmatics, 563. 

Damascus, 177. 

Damnation, 160, 261, 463, 468. 

Danaids, 261. 

Dances in Lent and Advent, 368; dan- 
gerous, 478. 

Dangers to faith, 93, 99; to virtue, 
475 ff.; see Occasions. 

Daniel, faith, 103; prophecy, 166. 

Darwin's doctrine, 153. 

David, type of Christ, 170; promise, 
164; fall, 172; Jonathan, 301. 

Day, the last, 102, 118, 125, 271; un- 
certainty, signs, 273; d. of atone- 
ment, 528; days of Genesis, 133. 

Deacons, 241 f., 648; deaconesses, 242. 

Dead, Mass, prayers, and good words 
for the, 2661, 425, 545; indul- 
gences, 639; appearances of the 
dead, 155. 

Death, through sin, 157, 160, 25//; na- 
ture and universality, 254; terror, 
uneertaintv, happy d., 255; spirit- 
ual d., lOO; 216, 574; eternal d., 263; 



confraternity of a good d., 717; 
image, 254. 

Deathbed conversion, 124. 

Debts must be paid, 396; before giv- 
ing alms, 426 f. 

Decalogue, 307. 

Deceit, 408. 

Dedication of church, rite, and feast, 
562 f. 

Defence of life and goods, 388; of 
reputation, 401. 

Definition of faith, 84; by councils, 
238; by popes, 239. 

Dei Genitrix, 322. 

Deo Gratias, 341. 

Dependence on God, bo9. 

Desires, evil, 384, 392, 413, 417. 

Despair, 279. 

Detachment, see Earthly Things. 

Detraction, 403, 407. 

Devil, the, i//7ff.; his power, 147 f., 
160; over the sinner, 462; obsession, 
148; possession, 149; magic, 316; 
spiritualism, 149, 316; d. and mira- 
cles, 96; prophecies, 97; sign of the 
cross, 106; in paradise, 158. 

Devotion, see Piety. 

Devotion to Guardian Angel, 151; to 
the Saints, 319; to B. V. M., 323, 
327; public d., 697. 

Diaconate, 648. 

Difficulties of faith, 89; of Bible, 87; 
of virtue, 440. 

Dignitaries, ecclesiastical, 227. 

Dignities not to be desired, 378; re- 
sponsibility, 379; good example, 
380. 

Dioceses, 225 f. 

Dionysius, Exiguus, Christian Er;', 
175. 

Direction, spiritual, 611. 

Disciples of Christ, 183. 

Disciplina arcani, 584. 

Discoveries and the Church, 250, 

Discussions, religious, 103. 

Disobedience, ^67; capital sin, 4G8; d. 
of angels, 147; Adam, 158; children, 
371; subjects, 377. 

Dispensations, power, 357; from fast 
and abstinence, 364; vows, 337, 
338; Mass, 556; marriage impedi- 
ments, 655. 

Dispositions, see Conditions. 

Disrespect to holy persons, things, 343. 

Dissimulation, 408. 

Distances in creation, 121. 

Distinction of persons in God, 130; of 
natures in Christ, 197. 

Distractions at prayer, 678 f.; at 
Mass, 557; Avorldly d., 684. 



Alphabetic Index. 



736 



Distribution of grace, 208. 

Disturbance of sacred service, 343. 

Divination, 315. 

Divinity of Christ, 200 f.; Holy Ghost, 
205. 

Divorce, 652 f. 

Doctors of the Church, 88. 

Doellinger's fall, 98, 229. 

Dogma, 84. 

Dominic, St., founder, 520; rosary, 
694. 

Dominus vobiscutn, 691. 

Doubts in faith, 100. 

Dreams, 314. 

Dress, immodest, 393; proud and vain, 
484; in church, 552. 

Drunkenness, see Intemperance. 

Dryness in prayer, 678. 

Duelling, 385; no Christian burial, 
702. 

Duns Scotus on free will, 118. 

Dupont, holy man of Tours, 346. 

Duties of bishops, 227; Catholics, 229, 
377; children, 368, 486; servants, 
486; citizens, 376; electors, 377; su- 
periors, 378, 491; governments, 374, 
378; the rich, 415, 419; the married, 
659; parents, 580, 661; the religious, 
519; priests and pastors, 521, 558, 
644; d. not to be neglected for pious 
devotions, 312, 354, 434. 

E. 
Earthly goods are vain, 73, 75, 139, 

418; detachment, 256, 288, 292; 

love of them harmful, 292 f., 306; 

when means to heaven, 76, 306, 418; 

right use, 418, 438; sinful use, 450; 

right of possession, 394; injuries, 

395; restitution, 397; socialism, 

414. 
Easter Day, 190, 358; E. candle, 188, 

190; E. eggs, 190; E. duty, 367, 594. 
Edith, St., her thumb incorrupt, 107. 
Education and the Church, 249; of 

children, 663; in mixed marriages, 

666. 
Efficacy of grace, 208; sacraments, 

576; prayer, 674; meditation, 687; 

rosary, 695; pious missions, 708. 
Egypt, 172, 182. 
Einsiedeln, shrine in Switzerland, 329, 

705. 
Ejaculations, pious, 287, 355, 681. 
" Elders," 241. 
Eleazar, his faith, 102. 
Electors, duties^ 377. 
Ellas to reappear, 169, 273. 
Elizabeth, St., cousin of B. V. M., 179, 

322 



Elizabeth of Thuringen, 267. 

Elizabeth of Portugal, 406. 

Elvira, Council, on celibacy, 521. 

Elysium, 156. 

Ember days, 363, 649. 
Emmaus, 177, 190. 

Employers, 415, 461. 

Enclosure in convents, 520. 

End of man, 73; creation, 135. 

" End justifies the means," calumny, 
410. 

Endor, witch of, 149. 

Enemies, love of, 303; vengeance, 304. 

Engagement, see Betrothal. 

England's conversion, 232. 

Enlightenment by grace, 207, 213. 

Envy, nature and malice, 296, 298; 
evil effects, 299; remedies, 299; e. 
in paradise, 158; none in heaven, 
259. 

Ephesus, Council, on B. V. M., 198, 
322. 

Epiphany, 181, 358; eve, 581. 

Episcopate, 648. 

Episcopus, 223. 

Epistles and Gospels of Mass, 85, 361, 
540. 

Era, Christian, 175. 

Equivocation, 411. 

Espousals of Mary, 323; see Betrothal. 

Essenes, 174. 

Eternity of God, 114; heaven, 259; 
hell, 263. 

Eucharist, types, 171 (manna), 593; 
prayer to, 210; institution, nature, 
589; mystery of real presence, 590; 
transubstantiation, 532, 591; con- 
comitance, 591; duration, 592; 
forms of worship and devotions, 
5921; exposition, 707; confrater- 
nity of Bl. Sacr., 715; see Commun- 
ion, Mass. 

Eutyches, heretic, 198. 

Eva and Ave, 691. 

Evangelists, 86; images, 328. 

Evangelium, 183. 

Evening prayer, 683. 

Evidences of revelation, 95. 

Evil and sin in God, providence, 119, 
136, 138, 140; sin alone e., 451. 

Evolution, 158, 

Exaggeration in devotion, 314; fast- 
ing, 365; pleasures, 356. 

Examen of conscience at communion, 
000; confession, 615; daily, 617. 

Example, good, 401, 438; of superiors, 
380; parents, 662. 

Exarch, 227. 

Ex Cathedra, definitions, 238. 

Excommunication, reading forbidden 



736 



Alphabetic Index, 



books, 101; freemasons, 101; ap- 
peal from Pope to council, 238; dis- 
obedience to Church, 229; anath- 
ema for disbelief, 240. 

Exorcism, 669. 

Exposition of Bl. Sacr., 707 ; in Shrove- 
tide, 183. 

Ecstasies, 218, 671. 

Extreme unction, 640. 

Ex-Yoto, 330, 337. 



" Faculties " of priests, 646 f. 

Faith, 89 ff . ; rule, 83 ; nature and ob- 
jects, 89; reasonable, 90; universal, 
implicit, explicit, 91 f.; gift of God, 
92; theological virtue, 442; means, 
92; obstacles, 93; necessity, 80, 93, 
101; effects, 93 f.; joined with good 
works, 94 ; motives (miracles, proph- 
ecies), 95; heretics, 98; infidels, 99; 
causes of losing faith, 100, 103 ; con- 
fession of f., 102; its reward, 103; 
denial and concealing, 104; f. with- 
out charity, 440. 

Falsehood, 408; in jest, 410. 

Familiarity, dangerous, 503. 

Family, and Sunday breaking, 352. 

Fasting in Lent, 183; means of grace, 
210; for poor souls, 266; a good 
work, 435; law of Church, 361; 
Fridays, Saturdays, 362; Lent, Em- 
ber days, vigils, 363; persons ex- 
cused, 364; excess, 365; benefits, 
365; a condition, 366; f. makes 
prayer efficient, 675; preserves 
puritv, 503. 

Fathers of the Church, 88. 

Fear of God, filial (servile), 126; a 
grace, 127; gift of Holy Ghost, 218; 
must be joined with hope, 276, 280. 

Feasts of Our Lord, the B. V. M., the 
saints, 358, 323, 319; fixed and 
movable, 359; Jewish f., 359; obli- 
gation, 359, 348; excuses, 349; 
Mass, 556. 

Felix of Nola, St., saved by a spider, 
119. 

Fidelity in small things, 512; in mar- 
riage, 660. 

Fire of hell, 262; purgatory, 265; f. 
blessed on holy Saturday, 188. 

Flattery, 408. 

Florence, Council, on members of 
Church, 228; beatific vision, 259; 
on purgatory, 266; papal infalli- 
bility, 239. 

Food, adulteration, 385. 

Font, baptismal, 188, 192, 580. 



Forbearance, 492. 

Forgiveness of sin, hope of, 275, -^69flF.; 
power, organ, means, 470; extent, 
470 f . ; by Mass, 543 ; confession, 
611; extreme unction, 641; prayer, 
676; perfect contrition, 619; f. of 
injury, 304 f., 424, 492 f. 

Fortitude, gift, 218; virtue, 445. 

Fortune-telling, 315. 

Forty Hours' devotion, 593. 

Francis Borgia and Isabella, 279. 

Francis of Assisi, 82; stigmata, 219; 
a deacon, 646, 648; the crib, 181, 
710; third order, 713. 

Francis de Sales, 88. 

Francis Xavier, 233, 252, 491, 520; 
gift of languages, 219. 

Fraternal correction, 423. 

Frederic XL of Prussia and religion, 
80; Jesuits, 249; duelling, 386. 

Freemasons, 101, 251; oath, 335; 
sacrilege, 344; obduracy, 459. 

Free-will, 208; not lost by sin, 160; 
consistent with God's foreknowl- 
edge, 1171; with law, 284; see 
Will. 

Friday, in paradise, 159; Good F., 188; 
no meat, 362; Mohammedan, 232 

Friendless Idouth, society of, 719. 

Friendship, 300; see Love of Friends. 

Fruits of the Holy Ghost, 140; of 
Mass, 542. 

Funerals, see Burial. 



Galilee in holy land, 176 f. 

Games on Sunday, 350. 

Garizim, Mt., 177. 

Genesareth, lake, 177. 

Genesis, book of, 132. 

Gennadius, physician, an immortality 
of soul, 156. 

Genuflection, 311, 593, 672; see Kneel- 
ing. 

Genuineness of the Gospels, 86. 

Germany, conversion, 232; persecu- 
tion, 236. 

Gethsemane, 176. 

Ghost, Holy, 205 ff . ; His di^inity, 130, 
205; advent, 192, 584; source of 
grace, 205; necessity and kinds of 
grace, 206; actual grace, 207; sanc- 
tifying grace, 211; His indwelling, 
211, 290, 613, and work in the soul, 
210, 213 f., 613; our teacher and 
guide, 214; His gifts, 216; extra- 
ordinary graces, 218; given for 
others, 219; consolations, 614; H. 
Gh. and Bible, 84; BI. Trinity, 130; 



Alphabetic Index, 



737 



iiicarnation,194; B. V. M., 325, 691; 
apostles, 192, 207; pagan nations, 
174, 209; Church, 214, 219, 237, 251; 
confraternity, 718; apparitions, 220; 
sins against the H. Gh., 298, 459. 

Ghosts, see Spirits. 

Gioja, Flavio, scientist, 250. 

Gloria in Mass, 538, 54G. 

Gloria Patri, 131, 341; in suflFerings, 
145. 

Glory of God, man's end, 73; work 
for it, 288; in creation, 136; g. of 
the Messias, 169; of the saints, 
259; of the angels, 151. 

Gluttony, 469, 498. 

Goat, emissary, 171, 528. 

God, i05ff.; existence, 109; nature 
and essence, 111; infinite being, 112, 
309; invisible, pure spirit, 113; at- 
tributes, 114 ff., 339, 480; eternal, 
114; omnipresent, 115; (pious 
thoughts, 116); immutable, omni- 
scient, 117; (pious thoughts, 118); 
all- wise, 119, 137; almighty, 120; 
supremely good, 121; loves the 
just and sinner, 122; all-patient, 
123; all-merciful, 124, 279; infin- 
itely holy, 125; just, 125, 140, 271; 
(fear of God, 126) ; true and faith- 
ful, 127; Trinity, 128 ff.; G., au- 
thor of Bible, 84; object of theo- 
logical virtues, 442; the Creator, 
132 ff.; His providence, 137; special 
protection, 277; His laws, 306; our 
absolute dependence on G., 310; 
knowledge of G., 79, 112; adoration 
or worship, 309 ff. ; reverence, 339. 

Godfathers and g. mothers, see Spon- 
sors. 

God-man, Christ the. 197. 

Good Friday, 539, 559. 

Gospels, 85 ff.; name, 184; g. at Mass, 
540, 554; reverence due, 85, 341. 

Government, civil, 373 ff . ; duties of 
citizens, 376; ecclesiastical, 374 ff., 
225 ff., 241. 

Grace, divine, 206^.-, kinds, 206; 
actual g., its ways, 207; co-opera- 
tion or rejection, 208; distribution, 
209; special g., 210; sanctifying or 
habitual g., 211 ff.; its effects, 212; 
its loss, 215, 462; certainty, 216; 
increase or loss of g., 208, 437, 613; 
means of g., 75, 210, 531; by sacra- 
ments, 572, 574; contrition, 574; 
confession, 613; marriage, 635; ful- 
ness of g. in Mary, 691. 

Gratitude, virtue, 429; to God for 
faith, 83: benefits, 288, 4.30, 674. 

Greed in eating, 498; of money, 496. 



Greek Church, the schismatic, 99; on 
Holy Ghost, 205; on souls after 
death, 257; history, 233; number, 
234. 

Green in liturgy, 564. 

Gregory Nazianzen, St., 88. 

Gregory the Great, 88; plain chant, 
566. * 

Gregory VII. and celibacy, 521. 

Guardian angels, 150; their help and 
our duty, 157; feast, 152. 

Guido of Arezzo, musician, 250. 

Guild of Catholic workingmen, 720. 

Gustav Adolf, persecutor, 246. 

H. 

Habit of virtue, 439; sin, 453, 466; 
prayer, 681; religious h. or dress, 
520. 

Hands, folding, 311; imposition, in 
confirmation, 585; ordination, 643. 

Hail Mary, 323; explained, 690 ff. 

Happiness of the wicked, 139; angels, 
150; Adam, 156, 158; eternal h. our 
end, 73; means, 74, 274; in heaven, 
258 fl".; degrees, 259; by love of 
God, 291, and of neighbor, 297; 
perfect on earth impossible, 75. 

Hardness of heart, 454, 459. 

Hatred of God, 294; of neighbor, 384; 
of the devils and the damned, 289. 

Haydn, musician, 568. 

Heart of Jesus, pierced, 187; adora- 
tion, 199; image, devotion, feast, 
531; confraternity, 716; league, 718. 

Health, see Life. 

Heathens, see Pagan. 

Heaven created, 132; for man, 74; a 
place and state, 257; its joys, 258; 
eternal, 259; begins on earth, won 
by suffering, 260; heirs of, 215; 
h. reopened by Christ, 163; sins 
crying to heaven, 460. 

Hebron in Judaea, 177. 

Helena, St., finding the holy cross, 
331, 703. 

Heliopolus in Egypt, holy family, 182. 

Hell created, 132; for the devils, 147, 
and the wicked, 257, 263; a place 
and state, its torments, 261 ; pai;i 
of loss and fire, 262; eternal, 263: 
h. on earth, 264. 

Henoch to reappear, 293. 

Henry VIII. of England, 98, 234, 653. 

Ileresiarchs, 98; divine punishment, 
390. 

Heresy and heretics, 98: and the 
Bible, 87: act of faith, 91; when in 
good faith, 99; not martyrs, 104; 



738 



Alphabetic Index, 



nor members of Clmrcli, 228; prayer 
for h., 102; Mass for h., 549. 

Hermengild, martyr, 370. 

Herod I., 165, 173. 

Herod the Great, 173. 

Heroic virtue, 447, 510; h. love, 296; 
h. act of charity, 267. 

Hierarchy, institution, degrees, 241 f., 
648; Pope, 223 ff.; bishops, 226 ff.; 
priests, 228 ; other ministers, 647 f . 

Hilary, St., on virginity, 668. 

History of creation, 132; Jews, 172; 
Christ, 179; Church, 230; Councils, 
238; Mass, 539; of churches, 559; 
baptism, 581; confession, 627; in- 
dulgences, 633 f.; Angelus bell, 693; 
third order St. Fr., 713; Leo XIII. 

Hofbauer, Clement, C.SS.R., 217, 304, 
397, 491. 

Holydays, see Feasts. 

Holiness of God, 125; B. V. M., 325; 
Church, 243. 

"Holy Father," 224. 

Holy Coats of Christ at Treves and 
Argenteuil, 331. 

Holy Land, 175. 

Holy Cross, 187, 331. 

Holy Face, 346. 

Homicide, when allowed, 388. 

Honesty rewarded, 400. 

Honor and reputation, 401 f. 

Honorary for Mass, 345, 545, 549. 

Hope, 27^ ff., 442; Christ's promises, 
274 f. ; reasons or motives, 275 ; con- 
dition, 276; joined with fear, 276; 
necessary, 277; gift of God, 277; its 
benefits, 277; efficacy, 278; objects, 
279; sins against h., 279 f. 

Hosts for Mass, 537. 

Humility, 419 ff. ; nature, 479 ; mo- 
tives, 480; practise, 481; "xample of 
Christ, 481; effects, 482;"pride, 483; 
h. blessed, 521; at confession, 623; 
prayer, 680. 

Hungary's conversion, 232. 

Husbands, 659. 

Hymns, Christian, 553, 673. 

Hypocrisy, 311, 312, 408. 

Hypostatic union in Christ, 197 f.; 
consequences, 199. 



Iconoclasts, 250, 328. 

Identity of divine attributes, 115. 

Idleness, 381, 473, 507; see Sloth. 

Idolatry of Jews, 171; pagan i., 313; 
spiritual, 292, 314; sinful, 314; dis- 
appearance, 204; veneration of 
eamts no i., 32L 



Ignorance, when te^<jU8e ifyoin hb^c-ay, 
99; from sin, 450. 

Ignatius, St., of Antioch, on Church 
of Rome, 231; martyr, 278; his 
relics, 331; on name of Jesus, 339. 

Ignatius Loyola, conversion, 93; 
founder, 234; begging alms, 342. 

Image of God in man, 154; lost, 159; 
reason of charity to others, 295, 303, 
305. 

Images, holy, of angels, 150; Christ, 
B. V. M., saints, evangelists, 328; 
THnity, 329; S. Heart, 531; venera- 
tion, 327; means of grace, 207, 330; 
miraculous, 329; bad, 393; in cata- 
combs, 327; Middle Ages, 330; 
veiled on Passion Sunday, 183. 

Immersion in baptism, 582. 

Immodesty, 392; in dress, 393. 

Immortality of God, 117. 

Immortality of soul, 154; of risen 
body, 270. 

Impediments, see Matrimony. 

Imperfections not sins, 461. 

Imposition of hands, 585, 643. 

Impurity, sins of, 3921; disgrace and 
evil effects, 504; how to avoid, 505. 

Incarnation of Christ, 193 ff. ; work of 
the Bl. Trinity, 193; ascribed to the 
Holy Ghost, 131, 194; (St. Joseph, 
foster-father, 194); a mystery, 194; 
its necessity, 195; Son of God lost 
nothing, 196; gave new dignity to 
man, 197; Christ the God-man, 197; 
having two natures in one person, 
197 f.; consequent truths, 199; 
Christ the Son of God, 200; God, as 
is proved by His own words, mira- 
cles and prophecies, 201; the holi- 
ness of His doctrine, 203; and His 
life, 203; the conversion of the 
world, 203 f.; "Our Lord," 204; i. 
mystical in Mass, 538; in commun- 
ion, 597. 

Inearnatus in Mass, 538. 

Increase of actual grace, 208; sancti- 
fying grace, 215; virtue, 447. 

Indefectibility of Church, 178. 

Independence of Pope, 226; Church, 
247. 

Indestructibility of Church, 235. 

Index of forbidden books, 101. 

Indifference, religious, 100, 245. 

Indulgences, 632 ff. ; power of Church, 
632; of Pope, 639; public penances, 
633 ; origin of indulgence, 633 f . ; 
nature, conditions, 635; various i., 
636; plenary, partial, 636 ff.; condi- 
tions, 636 f.; important i., 637 f.; 
at hour of death, 638, 642; for the 



Alphabetic Index, 



739 



dead, 639; utility, 639 f.; i. of heroic 
act, 267; sign of the cross, 107; 

name of Jesus, 340; jubilee, 634; 

Angelus, 693; rosary, 696; way of 

the cross, 707. 
[nequality of men, 140, 416; of grace, 

208. 
[nfallibility of Bible, 85; Church, 90, 

236; Councils, 238; Pope, 239; 

organs, 237; matter, 240. 
nfant baptism, 519. 
nfant Jesus of Prague, 329. 
nfidelity, 99. 
ngratitude, 431. 
njury to others forbidden, 296, 300: 

i. to our life, 383; to others' life, 

385; to property, 396; to good name, 

402. 
nnocent XII. and the calendar, 

182. 
nsignia of Pope, cardinals, 225; 

bishops, 227. 
nspiration of the Bible, 84; prophets, 

95; martyrs, 103. 
nstinct of animals, 152. 
nstruction. Christian, 92; necessity, 

neglect, 100; work of mercy, 422; 

before baptism, 581, 584; marriage, 

655; i. of children, 6631; the word 

of God, 569; sermons, 570. 
ntellect enlightened in paradise, 157 ; 

darkened by the fall, 159; enlight- 
ened again by Christ, 162; i. helped 

by virtue, 441; humility, 483; 

chastity, 501; self-control, 513; 

grace, 571; prayer, 676; i. injured 

by anger, 494; intemperance, 499; 

impurity, 504; i. and faith, 89; 

grace, 207, 213; wisdom, 444. 
n temperance, 469, 477, ^98-, effects, 

499. 
Qtention, good, 136, 425, It3Jt ff., 681 ; 

ministerial, 576; of sacrifice, 527; 

at Mass, 549, 554; i. of the Church, 

Pope, 637. 
ntercession of B. V. M., 325 f.; St. 

Joseph, 194; saints, 319, 360; spe- 
cial, 321. 

Qterpretation of Bible, 88, 240. 
Q tolerance of the Church, 245. 
avocation of the saints, 319 f. 
renaeus, St., 88; on Church of Rome, 

231. 

[reverence, see Reverence, 
saac, promise, 164; tvpe of Christ, 

170. 
slamism, 232. 
srael, kingdom of, 172 f. 
tala, Latin version of Bible, 86. 
te missa est, 541, 



Jacob, promise, 164; type, 170. 

James, apostles, 230. 

Januarius, St., blood of, 91. 

Japan, conversion, 233. 

Jealousy, 660. 

Jehovah, not pronounced by Jews, 
342. 

Jeremias, born without original sin, 
161; in limbo, 253. 

Jericho, 177. 

Jerome, St., 88; gospels and epistles, 
361; vulgate, 85. 

Jerusalem and its temple, destruction 
foretold, 127, 169; accomplished by 
Titus, 165, 173; population, 175; 
description, 176; see Julian the 
Apostate. 

Jests, lying in, 410. 

Jesus Christ the Redeemer and 
Messias, threefold office, 162 i; 
promise made in paradise, 163; to 
the patriarchs and prophets, 164; 
prophecies of His advent, 165; per- 
son and office, 167; sufferings, 168; 
glory, 169; types, 169 f.; prepara- 
tion of the Jews, 171; and pagans, 
174; time and place, 175; C. the 
Messias, 178; His birth, 179; name, 
181; flight to Egypt and return, 
182; public life, 183; teaching, 184; 
miracles, 185; passion, 185 f.; last 
words and death, 187; in limbo, 
188; resurrection, 189; with His 
disciples, 190; ascension, 191; in 
heaven, 192; sending His Spirit, 
192; Christ our mediator, 192; 
529 ff.; His merits, 530; "Our 
Lord," 204; King of the Church, 
222; of heaven, 258; head of His 
mystic "lody, 251, 579; judge of the 
world, 204, 270; the Lamb of God, 
530; the paschal lamb, 537; the 
"first-born of Mary," His "breth- 
ren," 322; beauty of His humanity, 
190, 537; real presence in Eucha- 
rist, 589 f. ; Model of all virtues, 203 ; 
His submission to God, 139; hu- 
mility, 481; patience, 489; perfec- 
tion, 509; suffering, 531; see In- 
carnation, 193 ff. ; sacrifice of cross, 
529 ff. 
Jesuits and Prot€stantism, 234; and 

education, 249; slandered, 410. 
Jews, chosen people, 171; history, 
172 f.; number in Egypt, 172; at 
present, 234; at destruction of city, 
235; belief in purgatory, 252; 
final conversion, 274. 



740 



Alphabetic Index, 



John the Baptiat, martyr, 104; born 
without sin, 161; his life, 182. 

John the Evangelist, gospel, 86; mis- 
sion, 230; image, 328. 

John Columbinus, St., good books, 
570. 

John Cantius, St., truthfulness, 412. 

John Damascene, St., B. V. M., 326. 

John Nepomueene, St., special patron, 
321; seal of confession, 218, 386; 
martyr, 104. 

John of Alexandria, St., hearing Mass, 
556. 

John of God, St., founder of Brothers 
of Charity, 421. 

John XXII., Sabbatine Bull, 253. 

Jonas, type of Christ, 170. 

Joppe in Palestine, 177. 

Jordan, river, 175, 183. 

Josaphat, valley, 176, 271. 

Joseph, St., foster-father of Christ, 
patron of the Church, help in death, 
temporal wants, 194; born free from 
sin, 161; his joys and sorrows, 141; 
his virtues, 194; spouse of Mary, 
194, 323. 

Joseph of Egypt, type of Christ, 170. 

Joseph II., Emp., sick-calls, 422. 

Josue, type of Christ, 172. 

Joy, spiritual, 522. 

Jubilee indulgence, 634, 637. 

Judaea, province, 175. 

Juda, tribe of, 165; kingdom, 172. 

Judas Iscariot, the traitor, 168. 

Judas Machabeus, prayer for the 
dead, 252, 264. 

Judges in Israel, 172. 

Judgment, particular, 256 f . ; general 
(last), 270 ff.; circumstances, 270; 
purpose, 271; manner, 272; uncer- 
tainty, signs, 273; rash j., 402, 458. 

Jugglers, 316. 

Julian the Apostate, bad books, 101: 
apostasy, 105; rebuilding temple, 
128, 176; death and blasphemy, 235, 
343. 

Jurisdiction of Pope, 225; bishops, 
227. 

Justice of God, 125, 139, 271; virtue 
of j., 445; hunger and thirst for 
j., 523; j. before liberality, 427. 

Justin, St., philosopher, 88; conver- 
sion, 93. 

K. 

Kant, philosopher, on Christian law, 

202. 
Kevelaer, shrine B. V. M., 329, 705. 
Keys given to St. Peter, 223. 



Killing one's self, 383 j others, 386, 

388; animals, 391. 
Kingdom of God, 184, 221; of Christ, 

168, 178, 222, 258; of Juda and 

Israel, 172 f. 
Kircher, S. J., astronomer, 250; on 

creation, 109. 
Kneeling, meaning, 311; before sacred 

images, 321; at Mass, 554; before 

Bl. Sacr., 593; at prayer, 672, 679. 
Knowledge of God, 79 ff.; excellence, 

necessity, 79, 82; by faith, 80; not 

perfect, 112; k. of the Church, 242; 

of natural law, 281; the gift of k., 

217. 
Koran, 232. 
Kyrie eleison, 540. 



Labor, bodily, mental, 352 flF.; sancti- 
fied by Christ, 352 f. ; by prayer, 
681; obligation, 160, 353; intention, 
354; reward, 355; relaxation, 356; 
servile 1. on Sundays and holydays, 
348, 350; when permitted, 349; 1. 
and socialism, 414 ff. ; 1. excuse from 
fast, 365. 

Laborers on Sundays, 350; socialism, 
415; treatment, 461; see Wages; 
Workingmen's Guild, 720. 

Lamp of sanctuary, 591. 

Lana, S. J., taught the blind to read, 
250. 

Land, holy, 175, 703. 

Languages, liturgical, 565. 

Lasalle, socialist, 414. 

Lateran Council on Easter duty, 595, 
628. 

Latimer not a martyr, 104. 

Latin language, 565. 

Lavigerie, Card., African slaves, 233, 
421. 

Law, divine, natural, 281; revealed, 
mosaic, ecclesiastical, civil, 282; 
Christian, 184, 282; of charity and 
love, 284 ff.; unjust laws, 376. 

Lazarists, 520. 

Lebanon, Mt., 177. 

Lent, holy season, 183, 210, 360. 

Leo X. building St, Peter's Church, 
233. 

Leo XIIL, biography, 225; on Church, 
222; Church and State, 247; rosary, 
695; third order, 713. 

Liberality, 444, //55. 

Liberals often most intolerant, 284. 

Liberty not license, 284. 

Libraries in Middle Ages, 249. 

Lieberman, Jewish convert, 246. 

Liguori, St, Alphonsus, 89. 



Alphabetic Index, 



741 



Life and heairfi, 580 II'.; gift of God, 
380; obligation and means to pre- 
serve it, 381; rash exposure, 382; 
injury, suicide, 383; sacrifice, 384; 
sins against 1. and h. of neighbor, 
hatred, 384; (its evil consequences, 
390); injuries, duelling, 385; mur- 
der, 386; (evil consiBquences, 389) : 
self-defence, 388; capital punish- 
ment, war, 388 f . ; reparation for in- 
juries, 389; spiritual 1. by sanctify- 
ing grace, 153, 212; baptism, 578; 
Eucharist, 594; lost by sin, 462; in- 
jury to spiritual 1. of others by se- 
duction, 386; scandal, 387; rules, 
387 

Light of faith, 92; of glory, 258; 1. 
created, 133. 

Limbo, Christ in, 188; Jeremias and 
Onias, 253; souls, 260. 

Liquor saloon, 478. 

Litany B. V. M. titles explained, 324. 
326, 696. 

"Lord's Day," the, 348; see Sunday. 

** Lord's Prayer," the, 687; see Our 
Father. 

Loretto, litany, 696; shrine, 704. 

Lotteries, 316. 

Loss of faith, 100; grace, actual, 208; 
habitual, 215; virtue, 448; God and 
heaven, 261 f. 

Louis, St., King, on blasphemy, 345; 
baptism, 577. 

Lourdes, 82, 704. 

Love of God, 28ItQ.', principal com- 
mandment, 284; necessity, 285; by 
sanctifying grace, 285; inseparably 
joined with love of neighbor, 286; 
288; motives, 286; practise, 287; 
qualities, 289; (love of creatures, 
289) ; advantages, 290; measure of 
merit and eternal happiness, 291; 
increase, 291; loss, 292; source of 
all virtues, 446; and perfection, 
510. 

Love of neighbor, 29If ff . ; command, 
284; with love of God, 286, 288; 
motives, 295 ; how shown, 295 f . ; 
rule, limits, 296; merit, reward, 
297; marks the true Christian, 297; 
sins against 1., 298 flf., 384 ff.; see 
Alms, Mercy. 

Love of friends, 300 fi.; friendship, 
300; true, false, 301; when allowed 
and useful, warning, 302. 

Love of enemies, its motives, 303; 
how shown, 304; reward and effects, 
304 f . 

Love of one's self, its motives, 305; 
true, false, 306. 



i.ove of the world, 213, 292; opposed 
to love of God, 292; causes, loss of 
grace and salvation, 292 f . ; blind- 
ness and disquiet, ii93; hatred of 
God, 294; ends in death, 294; its 
beatitudes, 525. 

Low Sunday, 584, 

Lucifer, 147. 

Luke, St., 86; image, 328. 

Luther, heresiarch, 98; his reforma- 
tion, 233; errors, 234; ruined church 
music, 567. 

Lying, 407 ff.; different kinds, 408; 
malice and evil consequences, 409 f . ; 
in jest, 410; evasion, equivocation, 
411; the truthful esteemed, 411 f.; 
" Father of lies," 159, 409. 

M. 

Macedonius, heretic, 98, 205. 

Machabees, the, 173, 252. 

Magi, the, at Bethlehem, their relics, 
181. 

Magic, 316. 

Mao'Vificat, 179, 341, 

Mamertus, St., processions, 700. 

Man, end, 73; origin, 152; nature, 
152; his body, 153, (not an ape); 
soul, 154; image of God and immor- 
tal, 154 f. ; heir of original sin, 161 ; 
dignity through incarnation, 196; 
his own littleness, 480; see Adam. 

Manasses, King, repentance, 276. 

Maniple, 562. 

Manna, 171, 590. 

Manning, Card., conversion, 246. 

Margaret Mary Alacoque, 82, 531. 

Maria-Zell, shrine, 336, 704. 

Mark, St., 86; image, 328; proces- 
sion, 336, 700. 

Marks of the Church, 242 ff.; perse- 
cuted, 242; built on Peter, 243; 
one, holy, 243 f . ; catholic, apostolic, 
244. 

Marriage, see Matrimony. 

Martyrs, 103; tombs, 332; relics in 
altar stones, 559 f. 

Martyrdom, 103; and heresy, 104; 
baptism of blood, 581. 

Marx, socialist, 414. 

Mary, B. V., types in Old Testament, 
322; mother of the promised Re- 
deemer, 163; of Christ, 179; of the 
Son of God, 193, 199, 322, 690; the 
Blessed Virgin, 324, 691 f. ; spouse 
of Joseph, 194, 323; immaculately 
conceived, 82, 84, 239, 324; full of 
grace, 325, 691; absolutely sinless, 
469; her name, 323: sorrows, 141; 



742 



Alphabetic Index. 



privileges, 324 f.; glorious titles, 
323, 324, 327; our Mother, 323; her 
feasts, 358; annunciation, 179; as- 
sumption, 84, 325; her death, 325; 
veneration of B. V. M., 322 ff.; 
more honored than other saints, 
how? why? 323 f.; honored by Gk)d, 
324; her powerful intercession, 
325 f ., 692 ; by her we obtain grace, 
210, 327; and perseverance, 632; 
help in all our needs, 326 f . ; devo- 
tion to her a means of salvation, 
327; different devotions, 323, 548; 
pictures, 328; pilgrimages to her 
shrines, 329, 704; Hail Mary, 690; 
Angelus, 695; Rosary, 6951; Lit- 
any and Salve Regina, 696. 

Mary of Egypt, conversion, 327. 

Mass, sacrifice of, 532 fl.; its institu- 
tion, 532, 589; a sacrifice, 533; 
power given the apostles, 534; 
types and prophecies, 534; history, 
534 f.; name, dignity, greatness, 
535; Christ priest and victim, 536 f. ; 
offertory, 537; consecration and 
communion, 538 f . ; ceremonies, 539 ; 
symbolism, 540; relation to the 
cross, 541 f.; its fruits, 542, 547, 
557; propitiation, 543; impetration, 
544; participants and beneficiaries, 
545 f.; offered to God for a four- 
fold purpose, 547; in honor of saints, 
548; for the dead, 266, 548; and the 
living, 549; intention, 549; merit of 
hearing Mass, 550; devotion at 
Mass, 551, 557; singing, 552, 566; 
attention, 553, 555; obligation of 
hearing Mass, 556, 348 f . ; in parish 
church, 557; on week-days, 557; 
celebration, time, 558; place, 559; 
altars and churches, 560 ff . ; vest- 
ments, 562; vessels, colors, 563; lan- 
guage, 565; chant, 566; music, 567; 
sermons, 569; daily M., 697; nup- 
tial M., 658. 

Masters, 350, 414 f., 461. 

Matthew, St., gospel, 86; image, 828. 

Matrimony, 6.^9 ff . ; its institution and 
object, 649; a sacramental contract, 
650; civil m., 651; divorce, 652; 
unity, indissolubility, 652; separa- 
tion, 653; special grace, 653; im- 
pediments, eccl., 654; civil, 655; 
dispensations, 655; bans, 656, 657; 
betrothal, 656; confession and com- 
munion, 657; priest, witnesses, nup- 
tial Mass, time, 658; ceremonies, 
659; duties of wife, 659; husband 
and wife, 660; parents, 661 f. 
mixed m. forbidden, 664; tolerated, 



665; virginity, 667; forbidden 
(closed) time, 368. 

May, month of, 323, 327. 

Meals, prayer, 683. 

Means of salvation, 74; promised by 
God, 274; suffering, 141; use of 
earthly goods, 418; m. of grace, 75, 
210; m. of Christian perfection, 512, 
516. 

Meat, why forbidden on Friday, 362. 

Mediator, see Jesus. 

Meditation, 686 f.; see Thoughts. 

Meekness, virtue, 444, 490; blessed, 
522. 

Melancthon, heretic, on Catholic 
faith, 245. 

Melchisedech, type of Christ, 167, 170; 
his sacrifice, 534. 

Members of Church (classes 250), 
228; visible and invisible, living and 
dead, 247. 

Mercy, works of, 4^8 ff. ; divine com- 
mand, 419; those bound, 219 f.; 
corporal, 420, 421 f.; spiritual, 420, 
422 f.; intention, 425; benefits, 427; 
m. blessed, 523. 

Merit, supernatural, 214; only by 
grace, 206; intention, 425; how lost, 
462 ff., 485, 488; regained by con- 
fession, 613; applied to others, 438; 
m. of good works, 434 f. ; in tempta- 
tion, 474; by penance, 625; m. of 
Christ, 530 f . ; applied to us by the 
Mass, 542. 

Messias, name, 178; false idea, 185; 
see Jesus. 

Meteorology, 316. 

Methodius, St., apostle of slaves, 232; 
on judgment, 273. 

Metropolitans, 227. 

Michael Cerularius, schism, 233. 

Michael III., Emp., blasphemy, 345. 

Michael, St., archangel, confraternity, 
715. 

Middle Ages and schools, 247 ; holy 
pictures, 330; workingmen, 461. 

Militant Church, 251. 

Military duty, 376, 389; oath, 376. 

Minister of sacraments, 576; baptism, 
580; confession, 609 f. 

Miracles, nature of, 95; kinds, 96; 
motives of faith, 95; proofs of truth 
or holiness, 96; good and bad men, 
97; m. by Christ, 201; miraculous 
images, 329; relics, 332; shrines, 
703 f. 

Missal, 563. 

Mission of the apostles, 83, 222: can- 
onical m., 228; holy m., 708. 

Mitre, papal, 225; episcopal, 227. 



Alphabetic Index* 



743 



Mixed marriage, 368 f. 

Mohammedanism, 202, 232. 

Monarchs " bv the grace of God," 
374. 

Monasteries and learning, 249; art, 
250. 

Money, see Alms, Avarice, Mercy, 
Rich. 

Monks, name, 520; see Orders, Re- 
ligious. 

Monstrance^ 563. 

More, Margaret, filial love, 370. 

More, Thomas, martyr, 334; daily 
Mass, 558. 

Moriah, Mt., 176. 

Morning prayer, 682. 

Mortification, means of grace, 210; of 
perfection, 512. 

Moses, type of Christ, 170; leader, 172. 

Motives of faith, 95; hope, 274; love 
of God, 286; neighbor, 295; 
friends, 300; enemies, 303; one's 
self, 305; of the veneration of saints, 
318; B. V. M., 323; relics, 331; of 
sanctification of Sunday, 351; of 
honesty, 399; against detraction, 
406; against lying, 409; of mercy, 
427; against sin, 462 ff.; of hu- 
mility, 479; of contrition, 619; 
against mixed marriages, 664; of 
prayer, 674. 

Mourning, blessed, 522. 

Mozart, musician, 568. 

Murder, 386, 389, 461. 

Music and Church, 250; sacred, Gre- 
gorian, 553, 566, 673; Luther's evil 
influence, 567; composers, 568; Ce- 
cilian Society, 569. 

Mysteries of faith, 89; in Trinity, 128; 
in nature, 129; in divine providence, 
137, 139. 

N. 

Name of God, of Jesus, to be rev- 
erently invoked, 339 f . ; in the hour 
of death, 340, 643; not to be abused, 
341 f.; prayer in the n. of J., 678; 
n. in baptism, 318, 320, 582; con- 
firmation, 318, 320, 588; good n., 
400 f. 

Napoleon Bonap. and Pius VII., 235. 

Natural revelation, 80, 109 f.; law, 
281; acts, 434; virtue, 439. 

Nature (creation) reveals God, 110 f. 

Nature defined, 197; in God, 112; in 
Christ, 193, 197; of man, 152, 154; 
of the Church, 221, 223. 

Nazareth, 177, 182. 

Necessity of salvation, 74; knowledge 



of God, 79; faith, 93; grace, 74, 206, 
467; revelation, 82; good works, 94; 
hope, 277; love of God, 2b5; re- 
demption, 162; incarnation, 195; 
Church, 245 f.; baptism, 579; con- 
fession, 606; general confession, 
626; communion, 594; striving after 
perfection, 509; zeal and fervor, 
506; spiritual reading, 570; prayer, 
677. 

Neglect of religious instruction, 100, 
569 f.; duty, 312; grace, 532; 
prayer, 317, 677; confirmation, 587; 
communion, 595; confession, 606. 

Negligence, spiritual (sloth), 101, 507. 

Neighbor, sins against our, 298 ff., 
384 ff . ; see Alms, Life, Love, Mercy. 

Nero, Emp., 231, 235. 

Nestorius, heretic, 198, 690. 

Newman, Card., conversion, 93, 246. 

Newspapers, 101, 478. 

Newton, astronomer, existence of 
God, 110. 

New Year's day, 182. 

Nicsea, Council, Divinity of Christ, 
84, 201; Easter-time, 190. 

Nicholas, St., and alms, 426. 

Noe, type of Christ, 170. 

Notes of the Church, see Marks. 

Novitiate, 337. 

Novatus, neglect of confirmation, 587. 

Numbers, holy, 109, 128, 183; n. of 
sacred books, 85; Christian persecu- 
tions, 203; of Christians, Jews, Mo 
hammedans, and pagans, 234; of 
Popes, 225; Councils, 238. 

Nuns, 520, 

Nuptial Mass, 658; ring, 659. 

O. 

Oath, 338^.; simple, solemn, 333; per- 
mitted, 333; conditions, 334; per- 
jury, 335; military o., 376. 

Obedience, Jt85^.; its nature, 485; 
limits, 283, 376, 486, 655; perfection, 
517; excellence, 486; effects, 487; 
disobedience, 487; vow, 336; o. de- 
manded in paradise, 158; o. to ec- 
clesiastical, 229. 374; reli'riou''. 520; 
and civil authority, 283, 376; to 
parents, 370; and others, 371; to 
confessor, 609; to husbands, 659; o. 
of priests, 521. 

Oberammergau, passion play, 336 f., 
710. 

Obligations, see Duties. 

Obduracy, 454, 459. 

Obsession, 148. 

Obstinacy, 208. 



744 



Alphabetic Index, 



Occasions of sin, ^75 ff . ; rules, 476 ; 
kinds, 477 f.; o. of impurity, 603; 
purpose of avoiding o., 622. 

Odilo, St., and All Souls' day, 266. 

Offertory in Mass, 537. 

Oils, holy, their blessing, 186, 670; 
see Anointing. 

" Old Catholics," heretics, 98, 460. 

Olivet, Mt., 176, 185, 191. 

Omnipotence of God, 120. 

Omnipresence of God, 115. 

Omniscience of God, 97, 117. 

Onias, high priest, in limbo, 253. 

Opinion, pious, 84; o. not faith, 91. 

Oppression of the poor, 461. 

Oracles, heathen, 97. 

Orate Fratres in Mass, 539, 549. 

Orchestra in church, 568. 

Order of the Creed, 108; Bl. Trinity, 
130; commandments, 285, 307, 357; 
ecclesiastical year, 360; beatitudes, 
524; sacraments, 574; Our Father, 
275, 689; Hail Mary, 690; litany 
B. V. M., 696. 

Order, holy, sacrament, 6Jt3 ff . ; orv^i- 
nations 643; institution, 242; dig- 
nity, 644; respect to priests, 340, 
343, 645; vocation, 645 f.; powers, 
character, faculties, 646; age of ad- 
mission, 647 ; minor, 647 f . ; and 
higher orders, 241, 648; celibacy, 
521; see Priests, Hierarchy. 

Orders, religious, origin, 519; vows of 
evangelical counsels, 336; vocation, 
519; their work, 249 f., 421; not 
communism, 417. 

Ordinaries, 227. 

Ordination, 643, 648. 

Organ, musical, 568. 

Organism of Church, 223, 241, 251. 

Origin of man, 134; world, 132; evil, 
141; Church, 230. 

Original sin, 158 ff . ; consequences, 82, 
141, 159; universality, 161; excep- 
tions, 161; taken away by Christ, 
530; in baptism, 578. 

Orlando di Lasso, musician, 568. 

« Orthodox " Greek, 233. 

Ottilia, St., special patron, 321. 

Our Father, the, 275; explained, 687 ff. 

« Our Lord." 204. 



Pagan blindness, 82, 111, 174, 313; 
morals, 204; oracles, 97; hell, 
heaven, 156, 261; cultus of the 
dead, 156; feasts, 359; sacrifices, 
528; baptism, 577; burials, 701; 



idolatry, 313; work of God among 
them, 209; p. expecting, 166; and 
prepared for the Messias, 174, 193; 
number, 234, 314. 

Palestine, 175 ff., 331. 

Palestrina, musician, 250, 568. 

Palm Sunday, 185; procession, 699. 

Pantheists, 135. 

Papa, 223. 

Papacy, see Pope. 

Papal titles, 224; insignia, 225; colors, 
226; benediction, 638, 642. 

Parables used by Christ, 184. 

Paradise, 157; lost, 160. 

Parents, 580; duties, 661. 

Parliament, 374. 

Parish, 228; Mass, 557; Easter duty 
367; baptism, 580. 

Paschal lamb, 170, 528, 534; candle. 
188; time, 367, 

Passion of Christ foretold, 168; ful- 
filled, 185 ff. ; renewed mystically in 
Mass, 541 ; its merits, 530. 

Passion Play, 336. 

Passions, evil, an obstacle to faith, 
93 

Paten, 563. 

Pater Noster and venial sin, 470; in 
the Mass, 540. 

Patience, 488 S.; effects, 489; p. of 
Christ, 489 f . ; p. in suffering, 144, 
279, 625; in bearing wrongs, 402, 
424; in poverty, 433; in prayer, 675; 
p. of God, 123. 

Patriarchs of Old Testament, 81, 164, 
172; p., title in hierarchy, 227. 

Patriotism of Catholics, 375. 

Patron saints, 320; special, 321; 
feasts, 358; p., title in Canon law, 
228. 

Paul, St., conversion, 93; mission, 230. 

Peace of soul, 76, 139 f. ; announced 
in Bethlehem, 180; means, grace, 
214; love of God, 290; patience, 
488; meekness, 490; self-control, 
513; confession, 613; lost by sin. 
464. 

Peaceableness, 492, 524. 

Penance, virtue, 604; public, 633; in- 
dulgences, 623; imposed by confes- 
sor, 623; see Confession. 

Pentecost, advent of Holy Ghost, 192 ; 
birthday of Church, 230; feast, 358, 
861; p. and confirmation, 584. 

Pepin, King, donation, 226. 

Peraea in Palestine, 177. 

Perfection, Christian, 509 S,; aspira- 
tion necessary, 509; blessed, 523; 
example of Christ and the saints, 
509 f. J its nature, 510; difficult 



Alphabetic Index, 



745 



(three degrees) yet possible, 51 i; 
general means, fidelity, self-control, 
512; abstinence, 513; regularity, 
constant prayer, 514, 676; sacra- 
ments, pious reading and medita- 
tion, 515, 687; solitude, 515; suffer- 
ing, 145; humility, 482; special 
means, evangelical counsels, 516; 
obedience, chastity, poverty, 517; 
persons in religion, 519; secular 
priests, 520. 

Perjury, 335. 

Permission, divine, of evil, 138; to 
devils, 147. 

Perpetua, St., prayer for the dead, 
267; on resurrection, 269. 

Perpetual adoration, 593, 

Perpetuity of Church, 235. 

Persecutions of the Church, 93, 231, 
235; help the Church, 138, 236; 
proof of her divinity, 242 ; persecu- 
tors punished, 235, 248; p. for 
Christ's sake blessed, 103, 524; p. 
of heretics, 245 ; religious wars, 204 ; 
p. harmless to the just, 76. 

Perseverance in prayer, 514, 675; in 
grace, 631; a fruit of prayer, 676, 
679. 

Person in God, 128; in Christ, 197. 

Peshito, Syrian bible, 84. 

Peter, St., apostle, his faith, 103; the 
creed, 108; his primacy, 223, 374 
bishop of Rome, his successors, 224 
his mission and martyrdom, 230 
his grave, 224; his chair, 225; altar, 
559; P. Pence, 226, 375. 

Peter Claver, St., apostle of negroes, 
233. 

Pharisees, 93, 174, 185. 

Phoenicia, 177. 

Photius of Constantinople, author of 
Greek schism, 233. 

Physicians, 382; Christian, 643. 

Pictures, see Images. 

Piety, gift, 218; internal, 310; ex- 
ternal, 311, 672; true, false, 354; 
must not interfere with duty, 312, 
354, 680; sensible devotion, 678; 
pious persons, 310. 

Pilgrimages, 329, 332; principal 
shrines, 634, 703; object, 705. 

Pius VII. and Napoleon, 235. 

Pius IX. and Immaculate Conception, 
82, 84; St. Joseph, ia4; heroic act 
of charity, 267; civil marriage, 651; 
rosary, 696. 

Place of Mass, 559; baptism, 588; Bl. 
Sacr., 590; marriage, 658; prayer, 
684; holy p., see Shrines. 

Pleasures, see Amusements. 



Pliny to Trajan, on Christians, 204. 

Plunkett, Oliver, head incorrupt, 91. 

Politics and religion, 377. 

Polygamy, 204, 652. 

Polytheism, origin, 114. 

Pontius, 0. S. B., taught deaf-mutes, 
250. 

Poor, the, see Poverty. 

Pope, th«, name, 223; martyrs, 223; 
bishop of Rome, successor of St. 
Peter, 224, 231; titles, 224; insignia, 
225; primacy, 223; jurisdiction, 
authority, 225, 374; infallibilitv, 
239; temporal power, 226; P. and 
council, 226; our duties, to P., 3741; 
ultramontanes, 375; antipopes, 243. 

Portiuncula, indulgence, 637 f. 

Possession, diabolical, 149, 669 (exor- 
cism) ; p., see Property, 394 If. 

Poverty and divine providence, 137, 
139 f., 432; example of Christ, 180; 
Christian p. and its advantages, 
ItSl ff.; duties, 424; and rights of the 
poor, 433; prayers of the poor, 429; 
voluntary p. and evangelical coun- 
sel, 517 f.; the vow of p., 336; the 
poor in spirit, 521; see Alms, Mercy, 
Earthly Goods. 

Prague, the holy Infant of, 329. 

Praise, divine, 341; in hymns, 553. 

Prayer, 611 fl.; its nature, 671; out- 
ward devotion, 672; mental and 
vocal, 6721, 686; in common, 673, 
675; praise, petition, thanksgiving, 
6731; its power, 674, 429; not al- 
ways heard, 675; effects, 676; means 
of grace, 210; and perfection, 435; 
necessity, 677; qualities, 677 ff.; in 
the name of Jesus, devotion, 698; 
attention (distraction), persever- 
ance, 679; pure heart and contri- 
tion, 679 1; humility (483), confi- 
dence, resignation, 680; at all times, 
514, 681; daily, 682; at meals, An- 
gelus, 683, 693; at Mass, 552; at 
holy communion, 601; at proces- 
sions, 700; in distress, temptation, 
474; anger, 495; grave under- 
takings, 684; at political elections, 
377; everywhere, 684; in church, 
solitude, 685; object, 6851; for the 
Pope, 375; for heretics and unbe- 
lievers, 102; poor souls, 266; the 
living and the dead, 425; for good 
priests, 363, 648; p. and tradition, 
89; and communion of saints, 210; 
p. of the sinner, 437, 680; of the 
poor, 429; meditation, 685; ejacula- 
tions, 287, 681; principal prayers 
*xi2lained, 687 ff. 



746 



Alphabetic Index, 



Preaching of the Gospel, 83; sermons, 
569 ff. 

Preface in Mass, 539, 554. 

Prelates, 227. 

Presence of God, 116; of Christ in 
Eucharist, 589 fif. 

Presbyter, 223. 

Presumption (rashness) sinful, 280, 
382, 477. 

Preternatural events by evil spirits, 
96, 148 f. 

Pride, J^SS ff . ; its nature, 483 ; mani- 
festation, 484; effects, 485; the 
queen of all sins, 469; the p. of the 
rich, 521; p. an obstacle to faith, 93. 

Priests, names, 223, 241; office, 228; 
hierarchical degree, 228, 241, 648; 
duties, 521, 644; see Order, holy. 

Primacy of Pope, 223, 231, 374. 

Processions, pious, a profession of 
faith, 102; united prayer, 675, 697; 
symbolism, 697 f.; object, 698; prin- 
cipal licurgical p., 698 ff.; funeral 
p., 700; divine p. in Trinity, 205. 

Profanation of Sunday, 350; of holy 
things and places, 343. 

Profession of faith, outward, 102, 228; 
p. of vows, 337. 

Promise under oath, 335. 

Propaganda College at Rome, 233. 

Propagation of Christianity and the 
Church, 83, 203, 231 ff.: p. of the 
faith, confraternity, 233, 314, 715. 

Property, S9S ff. ; right of ownership, 
also individual, 394; State rights, 
395; theft, 395 f.; robbery, cheating, 
usury, injuries, 396; when mortal 
sin, 397 ; restitution, 397 f . ; stolen 
goods, 398; reparation, 398; sins 
punished, 399; honesty awarded, 
400; see socialism, 414 ff. 

Prophecy, nature and purpose, 95, 97; 
fulfilment, 98, 128; messianic p., 
163 ff.; p. by Christ, 202. 

Prophets, 81, 164. 

Protestant propaganda, 83; martyrs, 
104; origin, 233; name, main errors, 
234; children, 228; number, 234; 
religious communication with P., 
104. . 

Proterangelium, 164, 194. 

Providence of God, 93, 118, 120, 137 fl. 

Prudence, cardinal virtue, 444. 

Punishment of sin, 125 ff. ; mortal sin, 
263, 463; venial sin, 465; vice, 467; 
perjury, 335; cursing, 342; blas- 
phemy, 344 f . ; Sunday profanation, 
352; disrespect to parents, 372; o{- 
fences against authority, 377 ; theft, 
399; murder, 389; of heresiarchs, i 



390; breaking commandments, 308; 
temporal p. remitted by good works, 
470; the Mass, 543; confession, 612; 
contrition, 613; indulgences, 632:, 
sacramental penances, 624; prayer, 
677; capital p., 388. 

Purgatory place of punishment and 
satisfaction to God's justice, 125, 
257, 264 f£., 465; greatness, variety 
of pains, 265, 620; existence, 265 f.; 
means of helping the poor soul, 252, 
266 f.; souls in p. members of the 
Church (suffering), 2501; they help 
us, 252; Mary and the poor souls, 
253. 

Purification B. Y. M., 182; see Candle- 
mas. 

Purity of heart blessed, 523; see Chas- 
tity. 

Purple in liturgy, 564. 

Pythias and Damon, friendship, 300. 

Q. 

Quadragesima, see Lent. 
Quarrels, 385. 
Quinquagesima, 360. 

B. 

Race, the human, its unity, 153. 

Ransom, order of, 421. 

Raphael, St., type of Christ, 170; so- 
ciety of, 719. 

Rash friendship, 302; oath, 334; vow, 
338; judgment, 402, 408; exposure, 
382; see Presumption. 

Rationalists, 99. 

Ratisbonne, Jewish convert, 93, 246. 

Reading, Bible, r., 87; spiritual r. a 
means of grace, 207; perfection, 515; 
prayer, 686; on Sunday, 349; its 
necessity, 570; lives of the saints, 
320; Catholic r., 720; bad and dan- 
gerous r., 100, 393, 460, 7,78 f. 

Reason and faith, 90; existence of 
God, 109; immortality of soul, 155; 
natural law, 281 f. 

Recreation, see Amusements. 

Red in liturgy, 564. 

Redeemer, the, promised, 163 ff.; His 
life, 175 ff.; His person, 193 ff.; His 
sacrifice, 529 ff.; see Jesus. 

Redemption, the, 162 f . ; preparation, 
171 ff. 

Reformation, Protestant, 233. 

Regeneration in baptism, 578. 

Regularity, 514. 

Regulars, see Orders, religious. 



Alphabetic Index. 



1^1 



Regulus, Roman general, his oath, 
334. 

Relations between soul and body, 152; 
apostles and bishops, 226; Church 
and State, 247, 374; the command- 
ments of God, 285; the love of God 
and that of the neighbor, 286; the 
third commandment and those of 
.the Church, 357; the gifts of Holy 
Irhost and the theological virtues, 
317; infused and acquired virtue, 
.'i39; the theological and the moral 
•virtues, 443; the sacrifice of the 
cross and that of Mass, 533, 541; 
the sacraments and our spiritual 
needs, 574; the evangelical coun- 
sels and the threefold concupiscence, 
518. 

Relationship, eccl. impediment, 654. 

Relapse in sin, 630. 

Relaxation, see Amusements. 

Relics, definition, authenticity, 330; 
description, 331; veneration, 331 f.; 
utility, 332; placed in altars, 559. 

Religion, nature, 75; necessity, 80; 
change of one's r., 245; r. and poli- 
tics, 377. 

Religious, see Orders. 

Reliquaries, 332. 

Reparation of injury, scandal, 389, 
624; slander, detraction, 405, 624; 
restitution, 397 f. 

Repentance, 124; see Contrition. 

Reputation, good, 400; duties, 401; 
ambition, 402; injuring another's r. 
by suspicion, 402; detraction, 403; 
slander, abuse, 404: listening to de- 
traction, 405; reparation, 405. 

Reservation, mental, 411; sacramen- 
tal, 609. 

Resignation to God's will, 138, 144, 
680. 

Resistance to grace, 208 f., 459, 

Respect, human, 102, 289; see Rever- 
ence. 

Responsibilitv of authorities, 378 ff., 
455. 

Rest from work on Sundav, 347. 

Restitution, 397 f., 4051; through 
confession, 629. 

Resurrection of Christ, 189; of man, 
268 f . ; r. and Eucharist, 599. 

Retreats, pious, 708. 

Revelation, divine, 80; private r., 82. 

Revenge, 304 f. 

Reverence to the Bible, 85; to God, 
309; to the name of God and Jesus, 
339 f.; to theBl.Sacr., .593; to sacred 
persons, things, and places, 313, 329, 
340; to the Pope, 375; at prayer. 



679; at Mass, 551; to parents, 369; 
old people, 371; the human body 
alive, 380; and dead, 701. 

Revival of sacramental grace, 575. 

Reward, by God, for the good, 125 f . ; 
after death, 140; for sinners, 140; 
for keeping the commandments, 308, 
372; Sunday observance, 351; faith- 
ful labor, 355; filial love and re- 
spect, 372; honesty, 400; almsgiv- 
ing, 428; good works, 437. 

Rich, the, and work, 353; laborers, 
415; the poor, 419; their pride, 521. 

Riches worthless, 75, 139, 418; dan- 
gerous, 420; purpose, 395; right use, 
418 f., 438. 

Ridley not a martyr, 104. 

Ring, episcopal, 227; nuptial, 659. 

Ritual, Roman, 573. 

Robbery, 394. 

Robe, baptismal, 584. 

Rogation days, 361; procession, 336, 
700; no marriages, 368. 

Roman Catholic Church, 225; R. epis- 
copate, 224, 231. 

Rosary, 693 fl.; origin, 694; useful- 
ness, 695; indulgences, 695; month, 
323. 

Rudolph of Hapsburg and Bl. Sacr., 
340. 

Rule of faith, 83; fundamental r. of 
human action, 281; of fasting, 364; 
avoiding scandal, 387; restitution. 
397; alms, 426 f. 

Rulers, civil, 374 ff . 

Russian Church, 234, 244. 

S. 

Sabbath, Jewish, 347; Christian, 348. 

Sacerdos, 223, 

Sacraments, nature, name, 572; sensi- 
ble signs and ceremonies, 572 f,; 
number, 573; character and sancti- 
fying grace, 574; sacramental grace, 
575; dispositions, 575; minister, in- 
tention, 576; baptism, 577; confir- 
mation, 584; Eucharist, 589; pen- 
ance, 604; extreme unction, 640; 
holy order, 643; matrimony, 649; 
s. of the living and the dead, 574. 

Sacramentals, 668; different kinds, 
669; institution, effects, 670; con- 
dition, 671. 

Sacrifice, 311, 526; oblation and in- 
tention, 527; Jewish, 527; pagan, 
528 ; motives, types, 528 f . ; s. of the 
cross, 529; its value, 530; motive, 
531; merit applied, 531, 205; see 
Mass. supper (last). 



748 



Alphahetic Index, 



Sacrilege, 344, 575; in communion, 
GOO; confession, 608; marriage, 651. 

Sadducees, 174. 

Saints, 250, 317 &.; veneration, 313, 
317; motives, 318; different man- 
ner, 319 fi'.; pleasing to God, 320; 
no idolatry, 321; special patrons, 
321; images, 327 ff.; relics, 330 ff.; 
feasts, 320, 358; names, 318, 320, 
582, 588; their help and interces- 
sion, 252 f., 320 ; models of Christian 
perfection, 510; found in every class 
of men, 511; imitation of the s., 
319 f.; their temptations, 148; their 
happiness in heaven, 258 ff . ; see 
Communion of s., 250 ff.; would-be 
s., 312. 

Saloons, 478. 

Salve Regina, 696. 

Salvation outside the Church, 245. 

Samaria, province, 176; city, 177. 

Sanctification of Sunday, 348. 

Sancius in Mass, 539, 554. 

Sara, her incredulity, 100. 

Satait, leader of the devils, 147. 

Satisfaction for sin, by Christ, 162, 
195, 529, 543; sacramental s., 623. 

Saturday amusements, 350; fast, 362; 
poor souls, 253; holy S., 188; bap- 
tism, 581; procession, 699. 

Scala Santa at Rome, 636. 

Scandal, 387; reparation, 389. 

Scapular, confraternity, 717. 

Schism, Greek, 233; schismatics 
heretical, 99; outside the Church, 
228. 

Schwarz, Berthold, 0. S. B., inventor, 
250. 

Science in Church, 250. 

Schools, Christian, origin, 249. 

Scripture, see Bible. 

Scruples, 284. 

Seal of confession, 610; see John 
Nepom. 

Seasons, holy, see Feasts. 

Secchi, S. J., astronomer, 250, 

Secret societies, 101 ; marriages, 658. 

Sects, Jewish, 174; united against the 
Church, 223. 

Sedecias, King, his perjury, 335. 

Seduction, 386. 

See, the holv, apostolic, papal, 225. 

Self-control, '473, 491, 512; s.-defence, 
387, 401; s.-denial, 260; s.-knowl- 
edge, 615 f.; s.-love, 304 f.; s.-will, 
93. 

Sennacherib, King, blasphemy, 345. 

Senate, U. S., 377. 

Senses, evidence, 90; grace, 208; de- 
votion, 678; punished in hell, 265. 



Separation of married parties, S53. 

Septuagesima, 360. 

Sermons, necessity, 100, 569; means 
of grace, 207, 210; duty of hearing 
s., 570; how, 571; at missions, 708. 

Servants, 350, 371. 

Serpent, the brazen, 106, 171. 

Seven, the number, 128, 216, 347, 
469. 

Severin, St., apostle of Austria, 232. 

Sexagesima, 360. 

Shame in confession, 607 f. 

Shepherds at Bethlehem, 187. 

Shrines, holy, 329, 331, 634, 636, 703 ff. 

Shrovetide, 183. 

Sichem, in Palestine, 177. 

Sickness, origin, 160; means of grace, 
143; remedies, 382; patience, 488; 
visiting the sick, 421. 

Sidon in Phoenicia, 177. 

Signs, see Ceremonies. 

Siloe in Judea, 177. 

Simon, apostle, mission, 230. 

Simon Stock and Carmelite scapular, 
717. 

Simon Ma^^^us, 345. 

Simonides, the sage, on God, 112. 

Simplicity in prayer, 313. 

Sin, 44^ ff • ; nature, 449 ; knowledge 
ana consent, 449 f ., 456 ; malice, 
450 ; evil effects, 450 f . ; temptation, 
451; thought, act, 451 f.; desire, 
452; habit, vice and its results, 
453 f., 466; kinds, 454; by com- 
plicity, 455; unequal, 456; mortal, 
venial, 457; imperfections, 461; s. 
against Holy Ghost, 208, 459; cry- 
ing to heaven, 461; consequences of 
mortal sin, 461; venial sin, 465; 
vice hard to overcome, 466; need of 
grace, 4661; evil effects, 467 f.; 
capital sin, 468 f . ; pride, 483 ; dis- 
obedience, 487; wrath, 493; avarice, 
495; intemperance, 498; impurity, 
504; sloth, 507; s. is an obstacle to 
faith, 99; to grace, 212, 215; to 
heaven, 260; leads to hell, 263; 
spiritual slavery, 462, 466; s. and 
divine providence, 140; see Forgive- 
ness, Occasions of sin. 

Sinners and God's love, 122; patience, 
123; justice, 125; trials, 142. 

Sisters of Charity, 421; see Nuns. 

Sisyphus, 261. 

Slander, 404. 

Slavery among pagans, 204, 233, 352, 
421. 

Sloth, 469, 507. 

Sobieski against the Turks, 277. 

Socialism, 414 fi.; object, 414; causes. 



Alphabetic Index, 



749 



415, 461: remedies, 415 f.; impossi- 
ble theories, 77, 416 f. 

Societies, religious, 710 ft".; charitable, 
711; third orders, 712; of St. Fran- 
cis, 713; principal confraternities, 
714 ff.; forbidden s., 101. 

Sodalities, pious, 711 f. 

Sodomy, 461. 

Soldiers and war, 388 f . ; marriage, 
655. 

Solitude, 515. 

Solomon, his fall, 104; his temple, 
172. 

Soothsaying, 315. 

Sorcery, 316. 

Sorrow blessed, 622; s. for sins, 604; 
sorrows, B. V. M., 141. 

Soul, origin, life of body, 152 f . ; image 
of God, immortal, 154; injured by 
original sin, 159; after death, 254; 
after judgment, 257; beauty by 
grace, 211, 441; its food, 100, 597, 
599; s. of animals, 152. 

Sources of faith, 83 ff . ; of heresy and 
unbelief, 93, 99 f. 

Speaking of God, 287. 

Species, sacramental, 532, 589. 

Speech, sins of, 411, 514; abusive, 
404; accommodated, 117, 130. 

Spina, 0. P., inventor, 250. 

Spiritualism, 149, 316. 

Spirits, evil, and miracles, 96; 
prophecies, 97; the damned, 264; 
degrees, 112; place, 115; number, 
146; our enemies, 147, 261. 

Spiritual direction, 611; death, 160, 
216, 574; life, 2121, 153; reading, 
207, 349, 570; mercy, 422; commun- 
ion, 604; exercises, 708; relation- 
ship, 583, 588, 654. 

Sponsors, 583, 588, 654. 

Star of Bethlehem, 166, 181. 

State, civil government and Church, 
247; concordats, 248; persecution, 
248; its authority, 247, 282, 375 ff.; 
duties of citizens, 375 f . ; of electors, 
377; of the rulers, 379; rights re- 
garding property, 395; taxes, mili- 
tary service, 376; limits of obe- 
dience, 283, 376, 486, 655; S. in- 
terfering in Church, 243, 247 f., 
646 f. 

States of life, 354; see Vocation. 

Stations of the cross, 186, 706. 

Stealing, 395 f. 

Stephen, Pope, baptism by, heretics, 
224. 

Stephen, King of Hungary, 232. 

Stigmata, 219. 

Striking the breast, 311. 



Stipends for Mass, 345. 

Stole, 562; fees, 345. 

Stolberg, Count, conversion, 246. 

Strauss, infidel, on Christian morality, 
202. 

Subdiaconate (subdeaoon), 648. 

Succession, apostolic, 222, 224, 226, 
241, 244. 

Sufferings and trials and divine provi- 
dence, 139; Christian s., i^iff.; 
sent by God, 118, I4I f., 489; to the 
sinner, 142; and the just, why? 
143; are blessings 144; patience 
and resignation, 144, 488 ff.; s. for 
justice's sake, 524; comfort, 425; 
and prayer in s., 684; Christ the 
example, 168, 185, 488. 

Suicide, 76 (pagan), 279, 383; burial, 
702. 

Sunday, 3^7 ff.; God's command, 

346 f.; day of rest, 347, 348, 352; 
pagan and Jewish observance, 

347 f.; appointed by the apostles, 
why? 348; how to be observed, 

348 f.; what work allowed, 349; 
how profaned, 350; observance re- 
warded, 351; profanation punished, 
352; S. Mass, 556; sermons, 570; 
communion, 595. 

Supernatural powers, 96; revelation, 
80; gifts, 157 f.; grace, 206; merit, 
214; law, 282; love, 287; acts, 
434 f.; virtue, 439. 

Superstition and its practices, 315 1. 
(religious practices not s.) ; a griev- 
ous sin, chastisements, 316. 

Supper, the last, 185; a true sacrifice, 
532 f.; the hall, 169. 

Support of ministers oi the Church, 
229, 368, 375; of Pope, 375; of gov- 
ernment, 376; of Church by the 
State, 248. 

Suspicion, unjust, 402. 

Swearing, 342. 

Symbolism of Mass, 540; churches, 
560; vestments, 563; colors, 564; 
numbers, 109, 128, 183; processions, 
697 f.; anointing, 178, 641, 586. 

Symholum (creed), 108, 

Synods, diocesan, 238. 



T. 

Tabernacle, 590. 
Talmud, Jewish, 203. 
Tantalus, 261. 
Tartarus, 156. 
Taxes, 376, 395. 
Tears of contrition, 618. 



750 



Alphaletic Index, 



Tell-tales, 404. 

Temperance, capital virtue, 444; t. in 
eating, drinking, 498; means of per- 
fection, 513; intemperance, 498 ff. 

Temple of Jerusalem, prophecy, 165; 
rebuilt, 173; description, 176; de- 
stroyed, 165, 173; attempts by 
Julian the Apostate, 128, 176; t. a 
type of Mary, 691; and of the 
Church, 560; soul a t. of the Holy 
Ghost, 213. 

Temporal sovereignty of Pope, 226; 
see Punishment. 

Temptations, 471 ff.; by the devil, 
148 f., 451, 471; why allowed by 
God, 148 f., 4721; how kept off, 
473; how ©veroome, 149, 474; re- 
ward, 475; prayer in t., 676, 684; t. 
of the saints, 148; see Seduction. 

Tempting God, 280; see Presumption. 

TenehrcB in holy week, 186. 

Teresa, St., her spiritual guide, 611. 

Tertiaries, 713. 

Tertullian on St. Peter, 224. 

Testament, Old and New, 169, 175. 

Thabor, Mt., 177. 

Thanksgiving to God, 288, 674. 

Thau, letter, in Ezechiel, 107. 

Theatres, 393, 478. 

Theft, 395; punished, 399; restitution, 
397. 

Theophilus, St., conversion, 93. 

Third Orders, 712; of St. Francis, 713. 

Thomas, apostle, unbelief, 191; mis- 
sion, 230. 

Thomas Aquinas, doctor, 88. 

Thomas More, 334, 558. 

Thoughts on God, 291; His perfec- 
tions, 116, 473, 118, 121, 287; pas- 
sion of Christ, 363; last things, 
256, 270, 273; religion, 515; see 
Meditation, 686. 

Tiara, papal, 225. 

Tigris, river, 157. 

Time, origin, 132; t. of special grace, 
210, 708; of solemn baptism, 581; 
of perfect contrition, 619; of mar- 
riage, 658; of prayer, 681 f.; closed 
t., 368, 654. 

Titus, Emp., 165, 173. 

Thursday, holy, 185 f. 

Tobias, faithful, 102. 

Tongue, sins of the, 400 ff., 408; hin- 
drance to perfection, 514; means of 
avoiding, 412 f. 

Tonaure, 647. 

Tradition and Bible, 84; its sources, 
88. 

Transmigration of souls, 254, 266. 

Pransubstantiation, 532, 691. 



Tree of paradise, 159. 

Treasury of the Church, 252. 

Trent, Council, on clandestinity, 651, 
658. 

Treves, holy coat, 331. 

Trials, 42, 145; in temptation, 472; 
see Sufferings. 

Trinity, the BL, 128 f£.; mystery, 128; 
unity, 129; distinction and proces- 
sions, 130; "appropriation," 130; 
revealed, 131; T. and the incarna- 
tion, 193; sign of the cross, 105; 
ecclesiastical year, 360; belief uni- 
versally expressed in the Church, 
131; T. Sunday, 131, 360. 

Trust in God, 77, 139, 279; see Hope. 

Truth Society, the Catholic, 720. 

Truthfulness, virtue, 411 f.; command, 
407; sins against, 408 ff.; t. of God, 
90, 95; Christ, the Church, 90; th« 
evangelists, 86. 

Types of Christ, 169 ff.; Eucharist, 
171, 593; B. V. M., 322, 691; sacri- 
fice of the cross, 528; of the Mass, 
534; Church, 560; hierarchy, 241; 
creed, 109; antichrist, 273. 

U. 

Ultramontanes, 375. 

Unbelief, 99, 111. 

Uncertainty of grace, 216; death, 255; 

last day, 273; salvation, 692. 
Unction, extreme, 640; effects, 641; 

conditions, 642; time, place, 643; 

see Anointings. 
Understanding, gift of, 217. 
Uniates, Greek, 233. 
Union with God, 213, 290; with 

Christ in Eucharist, 597; u. of 

prayers and good works, 251 f.; u. 

of State and Church, 248, 374; 

hypostatic u., 198. 
Unity of God, 114, 129; Church, 243; 

mankind, 153. 
Universality (Catholicity) of the 

Church, 244. 
Universe proves God's existence, 109: 

wisdom and power, 120; created, 

132; not eternal, 135; destruction, 

272. 
Untruthfulness, 407 ff. 
Usury, 396. 



Valentinian II., Emp., baptism by de- 
sire, 580. 
Valentinians, 193. 



Alphahetic Index. 



751 



Value of sacrifice of the cross, 530; of 
Mass, 530, 542, 547, 550, 557. 

Vanity in dress, 383. 

Vatican Council an inspiration, 84; 
papal primacy, 225; and infalli- 
bility, 239; bishops, 227. 

Variety of joys in heaven, 259; tor- 
tures of hell, 263; pains of purga- 
tory, 265. 

Veneration of saints, 317 ff.; see 
Mary, Saints, Images, Relics, 
Shrines. 

Vengeance, 304 f. 

Veracity, see Truthfulness. 

Veronica, St., her cloth, 346. 

Versions of the Bible, 85; gospels, 86. 

Vessels, sacred, 563. 

Vestal virgins, 501. 

Vestments, sacred, 562; their colors, 
563. 

Yia Cruets in Jerusalem, 636, 706. 

Viaticum, 602, 171. 

Vicar of Christ, 224; v. apostolic, 
228; V. general, 227. 

Vice, 453, It66E.; its chain, 466; 
broken only by grace, 467; dire re- 
sults, 467 f . ; spiritual slavery, 467 ; 
capital sins, 468. 

Victor, St., Pope, an Easter question, 
224. 

Vienna delivered from the Turks, 277, 
326. 

Vigils, 364. 

Vincent de Paul, St., 421, 520; society 
of, 719. 

Virginitv, excellence of, 517, 661. 

Virtue, V/.39ff.; definition, 439; nat- 
ural, supernatural, 439; infused, 
acquired, 439, 443; theological, 442; 
moral, 443; heroic, 447, 510; capi- 
tal, 444, 479 ff.; cardinal, 444 ff.; 
difficulties, 440; effects, 440 f.; 
beauty, 441; source and centre, 
446; charity the greatest, 447; in- 
crease, 447 f . ; loss, 448. 

Visibilitv of Church, 221. 

Vision, beatific, 258, 437. 

Visits to Bl. Sacr., 592; ad limina, 
227. 

Visitation B. V. M., 179. 

Vocal music, 553, 673; prayer, 672. 

Vocation, 354; to higher places, 378; 
to evangelical counsels, 519; re- 
ligious life, 338 ; priesthood, 645 f . ; 
parents' advice, 371; undue press- 
ure, 646. 

Voltaire, infidel, on lying, 410. 

Votes, political, 377. 

Vows, SSI fi.; nature, qualities, con- 
ditional, 336; religious, 336, 518; 



simple, solemn, 337; utility, viola- 
tion, 337; deliberation, 338; dis- 
pense, commutation, 338; impedi- 
ment to marriage, 654 f.; baptismal 
v., 582. 
Vulgate, version of Bible, 85. 



W. 

Wages of laborers, must be just, 415 f., 
433; defrauding a crime, 397, 461. 

War, 388; religious, 204; military 
duty, 376, 389. 

Washing of feet, 186. 

Watchfulness, 473. 

Water, holy, daily use, 107; at 
funeral, 267; blessing of Church, 
561. 

Way of the cross, explained, 706 f. 

Wealth, its acquisition, 394 f . ; distri- 
bution, 418 ff.; socialism, 414. 

Wedding feast, 6.59. 

Week, 133, 347; weeks of Daniel, 166; 
holy w., 188; Mass on week-days, 
557 f. 

White in liturgy, 56Jt, 125. 

Whitsunday, eve, 581. 

Wyclif, influence of his books, 100. 

Will of God, the, supreme law, 281; 
source of authority, 373; its trans- 
gression sin, 449; most surely ac- 
complished by obedience, 487. 

Will of man, and faith, 89, 90, 93; 
grace, 206, 208; conscience, 283; 
sin, 449 f . ; weakness of w. by orig- 
inal sin, 159; mortal sin, 463; venial 
sin, 465; vice, 468; impurity, 505; 
see Free will. 

Wisdom, divine, 119; gift of Holy 
Ghost, 217. 

Witnesses at marriage, 658. 

Wives, 486, 659 f. 

Witchcraft (sorcerjO? 316. 

Wladislas, of Hungary, perjury, 335. 

Word of God written, 84; unwritten, 
88 ; sermons, 569 f. ; last w. of 
Christ, 187. 

Works, good, 454 ff.; defined, 434; 
natural motive worthless, 435; prin- 
cipal w., 435 f.; intention, 434, 436; 
necessity, 436, 494, 401; reward, 
437; (living w.), means of grace, 
210; merit lost by sin, 438; merit 
applied to others, good example, 
438; w. of mercy, 418 ff.; remit pun 
ishment, 470, 612. 

Workingmen, see Laborers. 

World, the antichristian, 77, 243, 525; 



752 



Alphabetic Lidex, 



full of misery, 77, 139 f.; love of the 
w. is worldliness, 213, 292; is most 
harmful, 292 ff.; its beatitudes, 
525. 

Worship of God, 309fl.i must be 
adoration, 309; internal, 310; and 
external, 311; false piety, 311 f.; be- 
longs to God alone, 312 f.; forms of 
w., sacrifice, 526 ff.; prayer, 671 ff.; 
veneration of saints, 317 ff. 

Wounds, sacred, of Christ, 190, 199. 

Wrath, see Anger, 491 ff. 



Y. 

Year, the ecclesiastical, 259; its order, 
360; harmony with nature, 361. 

Z. 

Zacharias, his incredulity, 100, 183. 
Zeal of missionaries, 279, 288; capital 

virtue, 505; its necessity, 506; 

sloth, 507. 
Ziethen, General, filial love, 370. 
Zorobabel building the temple, 173. 
Zurich, socialist congress, 414. 



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